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global shift
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Global Shift Asia, Africa, and Latin America 1945–2007 mike mason
McGill-Queen’s University Press Montreal & Kingston • London • Ithaca
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© McGill-Queen’s University Press 2013 isbn 978-0-7735-4062-0 (cloth) isbn 978-0-7735-4063-7 (paper) Legal deposit first quarter 2013 Bibliothèque nationale du Québec Printed in Canada on acid-free paper that is 100% ancient forest free (100 % post-consumer recycled), processed chlorine free McGill-Queen’s University Press acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for our publishing activities.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Mason, Mike, 1938– Global shift: Asia, Africa, and Latin America, 1945-2007 / Mike Mason. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7735-4062-0 (bound). – ISBN 978-0-7735-4063-7 (pbk.) 1. Developing countries – History. 2. Developing countries – Economic conditions. 3. Economic development – Developing countries. I. Title. D883.M38 2013
909'.097240825
C2012-903464-9
This book was typeset by Interscript in 10/13 Sabon.
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Contents
Preface vii 1 On With the Show: The End of World War II, the Resurrection of Capitalism, and the Making of the Third World 3 2 The Sony Also Rises: Japan’s Undulations 31 3 Glorious Capitalism in Communist China 48 4 Reorientations: Colonialism, Socialism, and Capitalism in Vietnam and Indonesia 73 5 Tigers: Export-Led Industrialization in South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore 106 6 A Tryst With Neoliberalism: India after the Permit Raj 135 7 Storms over Afpak: Permanent War in Pakistan and Afghanistan 158 8 “Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran”: Dictatorships and Domination in the Middle East 190 9 Africa Independent: Peaks of Progress, Troughs of Despond 221 10 The Chimera of Progress in Latin America 252 Afterword 285 Notes 291 Bibliography 313 Index 341
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Preface To bring up to date a work dealing with the “Third World” involves little short of total re-writing. Indeed much of the data one uses is dépassé by the time the book appears in print, if only because one depends upon publications which themselves normally appear well after the events they describe. Peter Worsley, “Preface to the Second Edition,” The Third World
The history that follows concerns the rise and transformation of what for about four decades was known as the “Third World.” The birth of this world was one of the most unexpected outcomes of the wars that swamped Eurasia in the 1930s and ’40s and which put an end to colonialism in its conventional, European form. Alongside this newlyimagined Third World were the First World of Western capitalism, dominated by the United States superpower, and the Second, or Communist, World, dominated by the Soviet superpower. The three-world universe exploded, suddenly, at the end of 1991. With the remarkably peaceful disintegration of the Soviet Union in that year, it seemed obvious there would now be a single, unipolar world, that pole being centred on the über-USA, the last man standing and the one that seemed to own all the most powerful fleets, the most inexhaustible supply of dollars as well as the best pop songs and movie plots. But by 2007, after less than two decades of unipolarity, it seems likely that this world, too, might disintegrate, in part if not in its entirety. In the two decades after 1945, the belle époque of the postwar period, the rulers of the prewar European empires were awakened to the fact that the end of the road had been reached. While economic health was slowly returning to Western Europe, their empires were suffering from a series of afflictions that seemed incurable. Not the least of these were nationalism and communism. Meanwhile, the competition between the two superpowers, obvious since the end of the Second World War, transformed itself into the Cold War, a forty-year standoff during which the
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main military competitors managed to keep their battlefields at a safe distance. But after four decades (c. 1950–90), by the late 1980s, it was obvious that the Soviet Union could no longer stand the pace. By this time the United States had already established the global regime that was, apparently, to guarantee its dominance of the entire globe; “globalization” meant, precisely, a global system where the United States was not merely the dominant military power but the dominant economic power as well. This globalization, now only partly under American aegis, is known as “neoliberalism” and it still rules over us. I mention it in passing at several points in the narrative that follows. In any case, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991 it seemed obvious that the United States was incontestably supreme, economically and politically. “Unipolar” and “New World Order” had become the triumphalist terms used to describe an international situation in which, for the first time in modern history, there was but a single Great Power. “We are the indispensible nation. We stand tall. We see farther into the future,” boasted the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.1 Some argued, contentedly, that history had actually come to an end; with liberal democracy on top globally there was nowhere else to go. How could this not be the case? In this last decade of the twentieth century, Japan, the most successful of the Asian Tigers and, according to the declinist argument, apparently the main successor to American economic influence, was faltering, while China, whose return to the capitalist marketplace at whatever a low level was bound to make all Western vendors rich. China in the 1990s was still at some distance in the rear view mirror of the advanced economies and not likely, anytime soon, to enter the passing lane. But a decade has proved to be a short time in the history of modern capitalism. Now, twenty years after the disappearance of the Soviet Union, and in the bitter afterglow of a succession of setbacks, including defeat of the United States and its allies in both Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the great financial crisis that began in the late summer of 2007 and the second downturn in 2011, a reappraisal has come due. We now recognize that US neo-imperialism was the swan song of some five centuries of spreading Western domination and that in the future there must be a Great Power China among a constellation of other eastern economic stars. The West and East have partly dissolved into one another, leaving several centres and many margins of indeterminate status. With the rise of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) countries and the youth-led Arab Spring of 2011, the unpredictability of the margins
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and the marginalized has cast doubt on the stability of any projected bi- or multi-polared world. The study that follows considers the course of history over the period from 1945 to 2007. It is a reinterpretation rather than merely an update of my earlier Development and Disorder: A History of the Third World Since 1945 (1997). It considers the non-West not in regional or ideological terms (“The Middle East,” “The Communist World”) but in the form of an album combining, on the one hand, group photos (“Afpak,” “Latin America”), and on the other, portraits (“Japan,” “Vietnam,” “India”). Naturally there are gaps – whole chapters and several major arguments may seem to be missing – while the same foci – “oligarchies,” “development,” “ISI,” “neoliberalism,” “inequality” – pop up repeatedly. Some readers will doubtless be discomfited by my superficial treatment of Africa and Latin America while others may point out that the whole affair is biased in the most conventional ways – that is, towards the doings of men in suits and in the states that they steer. The simplest (and slipperiest) excuse I can offer is space; an earlier form of this study was nearly twice as long. But since the book is meant for the university classroom, I have had to be prudent. In the end, what I have found myself creating – more than a little unwittingly – is a Western history of the East from the standpoint of someone who has been a student of Asian and African history for more than fifty years. The view that informs my narrative is not, of course, just any Western view but one of several possibilities. There are, of course, other views – from Havana and Cairo and Calcutta, for example – which provide more adequate “Third Worldist” interpretations. Whether they are likely to meet the requirements of my audience remains to be seen. While the subjects in this book have been contemplated since I enrolled in my first Asian Studies course in 1957 (text: George B. Cressey, Land of the 500 Million: A Geography of China, 1955), this book has been composed in the last several years. It is based on lectures I have given in the History Department at Queen’s University since 2000 and is dedicated to my students there, especially those who stood by me in trying times in the autumn of 2011. It is also dedicated to the memory of contemporaries, none of whom I have ever met except on paper, whose insights, essential to my own understanding, are no longer available to us: Giovanni Arrighi, Peter Gowan, André Gunder Frank, and Fred Halliday. The debts I owe to my family, friends, and colleagues who have shared with me my trek over the past decades are inestimable. They include Mary Hallard, my pole star in too many ways, Lucie and Catherine
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Mason, fellow travellers, and my colleagues, old and not so old, especially Linda Freeman, Robin Porter, Myron Echenberg, Dan O’Meara, Emily Hill, David Parker, Paritosh Kumar, Jamie Swift, and David Macdonald. Librarians at Queen’s and University of British Columbia and booksellers everywhere, especially Oscar Malan of Novel Idea in Kingston, have proven to be of inestimable importance. To the anonymous readers of the manuscripts on which the present study is based, I would also like to offer my grateful acknowledgment. I trust that the revisions that I have undertaken on their suggestions will go some way to meeting their criticisms. My editor, Jeff Brison, has been patient and painstaking, and to him, too, I owe my thanks. As for my copy editor, Joanne Muzak, Sherlock Holmes could wish for such powers of detection.
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1 On With the Show: The End of World War II, the Resurrection of Capitalism, and the Making of the Third World Relations between the capitalist core and periphery have undergone extraordinary transformations during the twentieth century. In many ways the optimal form of the relationship from the angle of core economies was that of the core empires, with the British relationship to India being the paradigm. The inability of the European states to handle their own internal relations during the twentieth century produced paradoxical results. The combination of two devastating European wars and new, far more productive American production technologies generated a new phase of postwar growth in the core. And the rising American capitalism needed to break up the European empires rather than build a new exclusive empire of its own. Peter Gowan, “Crisis in the Heartland,” New Left Review Even if the crises that are looming up are overcome and a new run of prosperity lies ahead, deeper problems will still remain. Modern capitalism has no purpose except to keep the show going. Joan Robinson qtd. in Andrew Glyn, Capitalism Unleashed
introduction
By the end of the Second World War in 1945 the world had been divided into several parts, the most fundamental being the antagonistic realms of capitalism and communism. Virtually all of the Western world was capitalist, although in the homeland of global capitalism, Western Europe, this capitalism was in sorry shape, as we shall see below. By contrast, North America, where New York reigned as global capitalism’s new
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headquarters, was robust and expansive, having in the first half of the twentieth century undergone a remarkable transformation. Over the previous centuries, the North Atlantic had become the new Mediterranean, a sea that joined the two shores of the West and over which its leading states had indisputable dominance. But beyond the North Atlantic world from about 1920 was peril in the form of the dark, Eurasian, continent of communism. The condition of this communist continent in 1945 was desperate in the sense of material life, although in spiritual or at least ideological terms, it was hopeful. The Communists, after all, had history on their side; it was Moscow, not London or Washington, that had led the titanic and victorious struggle to destroy fascism and that was bound, ultimately, to become globally triumphant. On the periphery of the capitalist world was the “Third World,” as it became known from the 1950s, unborn but incipient. Its rise, struggles and divisions, always within the circumstances of the existence of communism and of the continuing hegemony of capitalism, forms the heart of the narrative that we shall follow. The Third World, we shall see, rose on the ruins of the empires of the Europeans and Japanese. These empires, which we shall take a moment to describe below, had at their hearts economic imperatives in that they all sought some combination of monopolized markets, accessible raw materials, cheap labour, and profitable investment. Ideally their economies were export-oriented; exports and empire danced together cheek to cheek. The music that kept them on their feet was the drumbeat of violence, either actual or threatened. (It must be stressed, however, that the violence against the peoples of the Third World only rarely came near the violence meted out by Europeans against other Europeans, or Asians against other Asians.)1 Since the decline of imperialism and its rebirth as neo-imperialism forms the underpinning of the history that follows, a passing note on the subject of empires may be in order.2 At the outset, let me emphasize the obvious – there has never been any such thing as a voluntary empire. Even in apparently peaceful realms like Canada, so distinct from Mexico or Peru or even the American West, the Indigenous people were forcibly dispossessed before they were marginalized, impoverished, and ultimately alienated. In his study of the origins of the modern world economy, Kenneth Pomeranz reminds us that in harnessing the New World to the old, one of the conditions for the triumph of the West, coercion was a central and possibly essential feature.3 Chalmers Johnson, too, gets this right in his meditation on the American empire when he writes that “the United States dominates the world through its military power.”4
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Of course the “neocons” of the twenty-first century acknowledge this, and the title and the contents of Chapter 8, “Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran,” reflect it. Let me then provide a summary history of the rise and fall of the empires of the modern age before we go on to discuss their submergence. empires
Up until the 1960s and ’70s, one conventionally started the history of empires and of the modern age together with a celebration of Columbus and the discovery of America in 1492. Columbus and his Spanish investors, venture capitalists before their time, were the pioneers of modern imperialism. Their objects were as simple as their achievements were astonishing. They were in search of opportunity, in the form of maritime routes to the fabled wealth of the Far East that skirted the Middle East; simply put, they were looking for some way to get their hands on luxury goods, spices at first and later porcelain and silk, without having to deal with the impediments that the Muslim powers had erected in their way. They had heard that China was the incontestable centre of the rich and sophisticated Asian economic world; nowhere, not Europe nor the Middle East, compared. Alongside China there existed other realms of potential wealth – for instance, Africa. Obviously Africa was closer than the Far East to the European heartland, although, until the middle part of the fifteenth century, accessibility to its shores was problematic. In 1415 the Portuguese had sought a greater share of the wealth of the African world by sending their armies across the Straits of Gibraltar and establishing a foothold at Ceuta in Morocco. As it turned out, Ceuta was the genesis of a Portuguese empire, which was to last, despite the decrepitude of the Portuguese state itself, until 1975. It is the Portuguese empire, then, stretching from the Strait of Gibraltar to the South China Sea and enduring from 1415 to 1975, that provides the book ends for an entire half millennium of modern European imperialism. In 1415 the Portuguese were after gold. This was the alluvial gold that was brought from the Niger Bend region of West Africa where, today, we find Mali and Senegal. Africans traded it to Berbers and Arabs who transported it from oasis to oasis across the Sahara to Morocco whence it was distributed throughout the whole of the world, Muslim and Christian, from the Atlantic to the Gulf. African gold was no mere luxury – it formed the basis of most of the coinage that circulated in the
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medieval period. Later in the fifteenth century, as the trans-Saharan trade fell off, sugar and slaves would eclipse gold to form another chain that bound Africa, the islands of the Atlantic off the coast of Africa, Iberia, and the New World together. Slave-produced sugar was to remain a major source of wealth for merchants and investors, European and African, until the nineteenth century. No other commodity has ever engendered such misery. It was the Portuguese who supplied the Spanish of the Americas with African slaves. They also settled slaves in the northeast of their own colony of Brazil to grow sugar there. (Brazil’s population and its footballers today reflect this: Argentina, Uruguay, and Chile were too far south to support plantation-grown sugar and have no African elements in their populations or, for reasons that are not evident, no great footballers.) Besides sugar, the Portuguese and Spanish colonies of South America and the Caribbean yielded a wide variety of products to stimulate fortunes of the mercantile elements of the economies of Western Europe – gold, silver, furs, cocoa, coffee, tobacco, indigo, and cochineal among others. There was additionally the loot, especially in the form of ceremonial objects made of silver, gold, and precious stones, plundered from the civilizations of the New World. As far as all empires were concerned, besides the imperative of violence, two other characteristics stand out. First, empires were about investment, accumulation, and profits for the privileged minority who ruled. Other factors, such as prestige and employment for soldiers and administrators were tangential. Secondly, empires at their height fostered grandiose delusions, while, in their morbid phase, they provoked bitter reaction. Yet, in the twentieth century at least, apart from the single case of the German massacre of the Herero and Nama peoples in Africa in 1904, there was no intentional mass killing on the scale of that visited by Europeans upon one another in the middle part of the century, as I have suggested above. For the slaves taken from Africa and the indigenous peoples of the New World alike, empires were about war, misery, and death. More than twelve million slaves were removed from Africa, a huge proportion of whom died either in the process of being transported or on the New World plantations where they were worked to death. And as a consequence of the European invasion of the New World, the indigenous populations were devastated by diseases to which they had no r esistance. In one estimate the population of central Mexico in the 1520s was twenty-five million. By 1608 it had fallen to 852,000. Peru
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supported nine million people in the 1520s and only 600,000 a century later. Imperialism, whether in the sixteenth or the twentieth century, may, quite reasonably, thus be associated with unintentional mass killing;5 the claim made by its promoters that its aims were those of a “civilizing mission,” or that the casualties imposed on its victims were the price of progress, is either fatuous or mere propaganda.6 The British, French, and Dutch got into the business of mercantile empires late. At first they satisfied themselves by trading with, and often plundering, the Portuguese and Spanish. The plundering of plunderers is a slightly more complex form of what has been called “primitive accumulation.” From around 1600, they began to build their own overseas empires, first in the Caribbean and North America, then Asia and Africa. Colonies in Africa below the Sahara, such as the Portuguese outposts along the Angola coast and on the Zambesi in Mozambique and the Dutch colony at the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa developed only slowly until the nineteenth century. The final stage in the history of imperial appropriation came during the “Age of Empire,” between 1875 and 1920. It was in this period, after the Atlantic slave trade ended (which was of interest only for its trickle of luxury exports like gold and ivory), that Africa was partitioned be tween the British, French, Belgians, Portuguese, Spanish, and Germans. Indochina was grabbed by the French in the same period, who thus got to share control over most of Southeast Asia with the British and Dutch, who seized almost all of the Indonesian archipelago. From the mideighteenth century the British had expanded their grip on India while the coast of China had been put under the influence of a combination of Europeans and Americans from the middle of the nineteenth. In 1920 the Middle East was added to the list of Europe’s dominions, but only tentatively; for by then the current of opinion in the capitalist West was running against colonialism. By the beginning of the twentieth century a tiny, archipelagic, American empire, formal and informal, had emerged. Its elements included Cuba and Puerto Rico, and the Philippines,7 several outposts in the South Pacific, and in another register, Liberia and Panama. This period of half a century (1875–1920) may be seen as the North Atlantic world’s finest and almost final hour – thereafter came wars, depression, and fighting retreats, fiscal crises, and the rise again of Asia, or, in the pun of André Gunder Frank, the period of “ReOrient.” The key date for Asia’s rise? Perhaps 1978 when Deng Xiaoping took the first steps to liberalize the economy of communist China and governments in the United States and Britain shifted their economies in the
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direction of neoliberal capitalism, which the Chinese embraced, as we shall see, on their own terms. What stimulated the late-nineteenth-century scramble for colonies? Numerous theories exist.8 One suggests the fear of protectionism; each European country feared that its rivals would elbow it out of lucrative markets and sources of raw materials. “If you were not such persistent protectionists,” the British prime minister told the French ambassador in 1897, “you would not find us so keen to annex territories.”9 There were also metaphysical motives: Shelley Baranowski draws our attention to the fact that the German Kaiser’s naval minister, Grand Admiral Alfred Tirpitz, appointed in 1897, connected empire with national survival.10 After the Second World War this rather desperate assumption still retained its attraction among politicians of the old empires of Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Portugal, but especially among those who feared what lay ahead in the postwar world. Besides being characterized by violence on a globalized scale, the Age of Empire had another characteristic. Overlapping with the last stage of the slave trade and with a period of widespread forced or “indentured” labour, which lasted until the First World War, was the period of environmental profligacy assured by industrialization and in the name of consumerism. A massive example: elephants were slaughtered in the thousands, especially in the Belgian-owned Congo, to make trivial consumer goods like billiard balls and hair combs. That Africans, slaves and semi-slaves, were made to carry their huge trunks over unthinkable distances reminds us that pre-capitalist and industrial epochs – slaves producing for urban populations – overlapped. Certainly, the industrialization of the economies of the North Atlantic states and their changing demands has to be understood if we want to see the motives behind the Age of Empire. These motives were, in simple terms, the same as they had always been – raw materials to be got cheaply, for cheap labour to collect, transport, and process these raw materials and for profits from investment in the extraction, processing, and transport. This applied equally to demands for newish commodities like vegetable oils (palm and olive, as in “Palmolive”) for soap, and natural products like ivory and rubber, and, as always, for minerals, gold, silver, and copper and, from about 1900, petroleum. These raw materials had become, from the early nineteenth century, the grist for the mills of an industrial world; certain big, old imperialist powers had transformed themselves into new industrial states: Britain, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany, especially. Old, pre-industrial
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Portugual pioneer of imperialism, was not industrialized and remained backward; it sold the manpower of its African subjects in Mozambique to British-owned mines in South Africa. Spain had already lost most of its American colonies before the Age of Empire began. Not all Europeans got their share of the cake. The Germans and Italians felt left out, all the more so because the Germans had been stripped of their colonies in Africa and the Pacific after they had been on the losing side in World War I. No more Platz an der Sonne. This rankled and was exploited in the 1930s by the rising Nazi Party, which demanded that Germany be allowed to seize lands for settlement on Germany’s eastern frontiers, especially in Czechoslovakia, Poland, and the eastern parts of the Soviet Union. Of course, the Nazi Party did not just call for land. After all, the Germans believed in total annihilation of the enemy, later known as “ethnic cleansing” or even “genocide.” About Italian imperialism, not much can be memorably said. It was based on delusive claims about fascist Italy being the successor to the Roman Empire; it established a brief hold over parts of northeast Africa – Libya, Ethiopia, Eritrea – and was closed down by the British during World War II. Libya, where the Italians hoped they might settle tens of thousands of surplus citizens, was under the control of Rome’s fascist government between the wars. The number of deaths from all non- natural causes in the colony between 1912 and 1943 was between 250,000 and 300,000 out of a population of less than a million. As many 12,000 Cyrenacians were executed between 1930 and 1931 while concentration camps killed thousands.11 Unsurprisingly, its empire gained the Italians little but ignominy and caused much horror among its victims, many of whom, in Ethiopia, suffered from the Italian use of poisonous gas sprayed from airplanes. A final point: the Portuguese, during their “voyages of exploration” along the African and Asian coasts in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, did, obviously, expand the possibilities of trade. They also redirected and in some cases smashed it; that is, Portuguese ships in the sixteenth century blasted their rivals out of the Indian Ocean and bombarded its littorals, undermining the expanding regional free trade. There is no way of showing convincingly whether inter-Asian trade was overall stimulated or overall depressed by the arrival of the Portuguese and their successors, the Dutch and English. It has been suggested that the Portuguese delayed the establishment of a Asian Pacific-centred world economy – holding it back, thus, for half a millennium – while a European Atlantic-centred world economy forged ahead from the early
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seventeenth century.12 There is also an argument to suggest that by forcing Asians to produce various commodities on plantations for the European market and manipulating local Asian trade in the interest of overseas markets, the Europeans engendered poverty, starvation, and even famine. This seems likely to be true, although, as a kind of moral offset, we should recall that it was Stalin and, after him, Mao Zedong, a Caucasian and a Chinese communist, not Western merchant capitalists, who were the all-time champions of state-engineered famine. wars
The long European nineteenth century (1815–1914), of which the Age of Empire was but a chapter, ended with what the Europeans called “the Great War for Civilization” that began in August 1914 and ended in November 1918. For most, the consequences of the war were stark and depressing, and the aftermath uncertain. While some hoped that there would be a return to the certainties of the world before the war, others saw it as the opportunity to refashion the politics of nations along new lines of socialism and democracy. So, after the war, while many talked of peace and stability, it was the threat of further war and uncertainty that were being stored up for the future. The first of the two most striking changes wrought by the war was the appearance on the world stage of American power, the consequence of the United States having become the world’s largest economy by 1913. Second, there was the revolutionary birth of the Soviet Union in 1917 from the ruins of czarist Russia. In the whole history of the twentieth century there was no more influential event than the Russian revolution, just as in the eighteenth there was no more remarkable event than the French Revolution. As Europe of the old monarchies thus crumbled after World War I, in its former domains rose new ideologies that would virtually guarantee future crisis. For two of the major western powers, Britain and France, victory in the Great War was taken as an opportunity to expand and consolidate their hold on the world. Both had centuries of imperial conquests behind them and both, like Tirpitz and other Germans, saw their empires as guarantees of greatness. For them, the most dazzling prize offered in the postwar peace settlement negotiated at Versailles in 1919 was the oilsoaked lands of the Middle East, the final frontier for colonial expansion. Having, during the war, secretly agreed with the French to the carve-up of this region, the British immediately after the war moved in
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to dominate Iraq as well as to take control of Palestine and TransJordan. British domination of several statelets of the Gulf and of Aden had already been negotiated. The French, yet again trumped by the British in the pursuit of empire, had to content themselves with Syria – out of the side of which they carved Lebanon. Vivisection, the fate of Africa, now befell the whole of the Arab-speaking world from the western borders of Iran through Egypt and the Sudan to the shores of Morocco. Unbelievers now ruled the umma, the community of Muslims. As I shall argue below, the rise of “political Islam” in the last quarter of the twentieth century came as the most profound consequence of this instance of Western imperialism. Several other powers had benefited from the postwar carve-up authorized by the assumptions of the Versailles peace treaty of 1919, including the United States, which was licenced to seize morsels of the former German overseas empire in the Pacific. The Americans were now permanently launched into a sphere that the Europeans had claimed as their own in the nineteenth century and into which the Japanese, latecomers to industry and empire, were also expanding. In sum, then, by about 1920, the Middle East, together with East and Southeast Asia, seemed to be on the way to following South Asia and Africa as a domain of foreign rule. The voices of nationalists whether Chinese, Vietnamese, Arab, or Indian were drowned out by the clamour of the Europeans and Americans boasting of the benefits sure to follow from their domination. Imperialism and the nationalism it guaranteed were to be the guiding stars in the history of Asia and Africa right up until the last quarter of the twentieth century. If World War I had been mainly a European affair – with echoes that were heard everywhere – World War II (1939–45) was a Eurasian and Pacific struggle – but with effects that were diametrically opposite to those of World War I. Instead of launching the further colonial partition of the world, in comparatively short order (c. 1947–75), it undid the global dominance of Western Europe and opened the door to the epoch marked by the zenith of US global power and the domination of its economic practices and multinational firms. The epoch of unrivalled American power was coincidentally the heyday of the Third World; the one having fashioned the other as an unplanned corollary of the Cold War. While we can now in 2012 see that parts of what was once the Third World – especially China and most of East and Southeast Asia – were emancipated and “developed” in the postwar period, much of Africa and Latin America managed only to sputter along, rising towards
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greater independence and economic security, falling back under the pressure of foreign manipulation, and then attempting to advance again but always with uncertainty, at least until the early twenty-first century. The American preoccupation with the Middle East and Central Asia has been offered, quite plausibly, as an explanation for the renaissance of Latin American independence and economic development. Brazil, especially under Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (popularly known as Lula), was as much a regional phoenix as any of the Asian dragons. The spread of American domination, if not actually an empire in the conventional sense, has been beyond question remarkable, comparable to the spread of that of the Soviet-backed communism (1918–48), or, very much earlier, the sudden spread of Islam (in the late seventh and early eighth centuries CE). While the origins of US domination, during what is sometimes called the “American century,” are debatable, beyond doubt in the minds of liberal commentators in the early twenty-first century is the fact of decline. “Time has expired on the American Century,” says the dust cover of Andrew J. Bacevich’s 2010 book.13 nullpunkt : the postwar european world
“Today the sun goes down on more suffering than ever before in the world,” British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (r. 1940–45, 1951–55) observed in early February 1945. Three months later, on 8 May, the war in Europe was over. Germany, the greatest industrial society on the continent and the ephemeral possessor of a gigantic European empire, lay in ruins and its homelands – not only the Germany that we now recognize but on such frontiers as Sudetenland and East Prussia – suffered the indignity of being occupied by its enemies. Almost every factory chimney … stood cold and still. Businesses lay empty, for what business could be done? No trains ran. Refugees huddled in overcrowded ruins, feeding on soup, potatoes and despair. No vessels save Allied warships moved in the ports. The roads were clogged with stony-faced people; soldiers in tattered uniforms or ill-fitting civilian clothes creeping home, families fleeing from the Russians; freed prisoners and slave labourers roaming the landscape in search of freedom, revenge or booty. Thick dust, generated by countless millions of explosive concussions from end to end of Germany, lay on everything – windows, furniture, vehicles, houses, corpses, living people. Max Hastings, Armageddon: The Battle for Germany, 1944–45
Germany now existed only notionally in economic terms, its cities were piles of rubble, and large tracts of its rich industrial and agricultural
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prewar territories in the East were severed from it. For a brief period after its defeat, Germany had even lacked paper currency. Instead, American cigarettes were used; teachers working for the Occupation authorities were paid five packs a week. Sex was paid for in cigs. In Hamburg, an egg cost a day’s wages. Everyone wanted American dollars. Not until 1949–50 did economic recuperation really begin. Even in 1950, seventeen million of West Germany’s forty-seven million were still living in poverty. Thirty-six and a half million Europeans had died between 1939 and 1945 from war-related causes, of whom six million were Jews murdered in cold blood. No war in history had killed so many people in such a short space of time.14 Soviet military losses alone were 8.6 million; of 5.5 million Soviet soldiers captured by the Germans, 3.3 million died in captivity. Soviet losses in the battle for Moscow alone “were greater than the combined casualties of Britain and the United States in the whole of World War II.”15 We might recall these figures when we contemplate the enormities inflicted on Asians, Africans, and Latin Americans in the postwar period. By the end of August 1945 Japan had followed its ally Germany to defeat. The epoch that had followed the stretched nineteenth century (1815–1945) – by whatever name – was now at an end, and the American age, the age of the “indispensible nation” (c. 1945–2007) – had commenced.16 American armies and ancillary forces like those under British command (including the Canadians) were dispersed across Western Europe, Southeast Asia, and Japan by September 1945. Facing them, the armies of the Soviet Union controlled the whole of northern Eurasia from the Baltic to Sea of Japan. Thus, abruptly, there came into being two main geopolitical spheres separated, in one provocative telling, by an “iron curtain.” These spheres were quite distinct from those that had been in place a mere five years before when the great empires of Britain, France, and Japan had seemed so indestructible. Then much of the world had been divided into blocs, empires, and zones of influence, some expanding, others becalmed, many waiting. But this world had come tumbling down. Of the novel postwar spheres separated by the imaginary curtain, the largest and richest was the “West,” later called the “free world” and sometimes the “First World” or even the “Atlantic World.” The West included Western Europe, the heartland of the great colonial empires. This world was for the greater part devastated and humbled, depleted, starved, shocked, and disorganized. Through the whole of the period
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from 1945 to 2007 it was politically, culturally, economically, and militarily dominated – in American international relations jargon, “led” – by the United States. This idea of US “leadership” was reaffirmed at the beginning of the war when the newspaper magnate, Henry Luce, summonsed Americans “to realize their destiny as the crowning glory of human achievement.” The fortunes of all nations, he ran on, “depended on US management of the international community.”17 Naturally, it was difficult for leaders in London or Paris to admit this openly. Still, even though the Western Europeans, and especially the French under President de Gaulle (r. 1959–69) might resent this, or pretend it was otherwise, as did the British with their comforting notion of a “special relationship,” American domination was clear. Two world wars in quick succession had, after all, put paid to any claims that the Western Europeans might have to determining the flow of world politics or be able to trumpet their “civilizing mission.” As we shall see, this was of fundamental importance as far as the Third World was concerned. Now America ruled. Within the orbit of the great American centres were all the institutions that would matter for the next fifty years – Wall Street, the United Nations (UN), the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Pentagon, the great universities, the film studios, and the powerful think tanks. To the chagrin of the French, even art, ever mercenary, moved its headquarters from Paris to New York. Now, parallel to ballooning American political and economic influence, American culture came to suffuse the world: Mickey Mouse, Marlboros, and later McDonald’s were embraced by almost everyone who could afford the price of a T-shirt, a cigarette, or a Big Mac. The business of Western Europe, it became increasingly evident, was business not empires, and the terms of business – from currency reserves to rating agencies – were invariably expressed in US terms. This was the case for the whole period 1945 to 2007. As I have suggested, facing the free world from 1945 to 1991 was a rival political and economic giant, the Soviet Union, the heartland of a “Second World.” Ravaged by wars and torn by purges and mass displacements for much of the period from the outbreak of World War I (1914) to the end of World War II (1945), the Soviet Union had, with the defeat of Germany, become more coherent and militarily powerful than ever. It offered a grand idea, communism, which not only its leaders but many throughout the First World felt was a glorious plan for the future of humanity. Having kept control of czarist Russia’s continental territories – including those of Central Asia – and having expanded westward into
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the Baltic and Prussia as a consequence of its victories against the Germans – “the Soviet Bloc” became even more threatening to the West when allied to China, the world’s most populous country, where in 1949, in the aftermath of the Japanese defeat in 1945 and civil war, communists had taken control. Communist-controlled parts of the world now constituted a looming monolith. The Cold War (c. 1947–90) was prosecuted in an attempt to cripple this monolith and to prevent Moscow from spreading its influence. Though massive and potentially powerful, China did not pose the same kind of active threat during this period – it became overwhelmingly autarkic, that is, inward-looking. To people of the colonial world struggling for emancipation from Western colonialism or from US domination, like certain of the Vietnamese or the Indonesians or the Cubans, or even some Afghanis, the Soviet Union offered enticing possibilities. Both of these worlds, the first, capitalist, and the second, communist, world were in a state of flux, and out of this flux was born the “Third World,” the independent existence of which was seen as a challenging opportunity for both the United States and the communists. Before we consider this Third World we should look in more detail at the condition of first two worlds in order to try to understand how they sought to shape the Third World to their own advantage. the heartland : west european resurgence
The British had forged the most successful economy in the world in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As late as the 1930s, London had been the heart of global finance; sterling was the international currency. In 1945 the British still had the world’s greatest empire and were the supreme power in Western Europe. They had “stood alone” in the first part of the war – apart, that is, from their massive empire and commonwealth – and, all told, had suffered about 370,000 war deaths, which was about six times as many casualties as the Americans were to suffer in Vietnam and on the basis of a much smaller population. Now, as victors, they sought to recover what they had lost – industrial leadership and commercial domination, a reborn empire sustained by naval and air bases in Asia and Africa and by troops conscripted at home and in the colonies, replenished sterling reserves, diplomatic pre-eminence in Europe and the world. There were hints of a New Jerusalem to come. What British leaders, especially those like Winston Churchill and his homologues had failed to grasp was that, in spite of the huge and heroic efforts entailed in mobilizing their people against the threats from
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Germany and Japan, Britain could no longer claim to be a great power, either financial, commercial, or military.18 The eminent economist J.M. Keynes (1883–1946) had tried to point out at the end of the war that there was little, in reality, to sustain Britain’s ballooning triumphalism, that Britain during the duration of the war had sold off its foreign investments and dispensed huge sums on feeding and defending itself and preserving its empire. It was now broke. Nonetheless, the British seemed determined to press on as before; in spite of an empty treasury, vast armies were maintained, and British bases, crawling with armed men and bristling with ships and warplanes, still girdled the southern oceans and their littorals – Gibraltar, Malta, Cyprus, Suez, Aden, Cape Town, Singapore, Hong Kong. Some of these soldiers – in Greece, Burma, Indochina, the Dutch East Indies, Malaya, Kenya, Cyprus, and Egypt – would be called upon to fight wars of imperial redemption against a wide range of nationalist movements into the 1950s. These wars were sometimes known as “emergencies,” and from the viewpoint of imperial ambition emergencies they were. Yet in spite of the actions of military fire brigades, in the end the fires of nationalism proved to be inextinguishable. Gradually, then, with a mixture of relief and bitterness, the British withdrew, first from India and then from Singapore and East of Suez. Finally, in 1997, after a rearguard action that had lasted for more than fifty years, amid wistful eulogies, false promises, and tears on the rain-sodden evening of 30 June, the last British governor, a failed Conservative member of Parliament, sailed away from Hong Kong. This apart, by the 1970s “Empire” had already become a matter not for politicians but for historians and novelists while its institutions, like its memories, faded away. The liquidation of European empires was to become one of the most shocking of the unintended consequences of the Second World War. The French had possessed the second greatest of the overseas empires. Unlike the triumphant British at the end of the war, the French, humiliated by swift defeat followed by five years of German occupation and collaboration and the loss of their position in the Middle East, were despondent. “As the tide [of war] retreated it suddenly exposed, from one end to another, the mutilated body of France,” lamented Charles de Gaulle, France’s exiled wartime leader and its postwar champion.19 Yet de Gaulle, who confessed that the war had changed everything, could not imagine that the process of metropolitan recovery could be successful without the resources of a rehabilitated French empire, despite the
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estrangement with the colonies during the war. Then there was the matter of French prestige; it went without saying that great nations had to have great empires. France would never give up on the African theatre of its colonial empire. Elsewhere and in spite of the destruction at home, imperial longing lived on. After the war the Dutch lamented, Indië verloren, raampspoed geboren (“If the Indies are lost, we’re done for”).20 Two imperial powers, Portugal and Spain, both reactionary backwaters that had stayed neutral (while sympathizing with fascism) during the war, had actually benefited from it. Portugal in particular hung on to its colonial possessions, despite widespread poverty, ill-health, and medieval levels of ignorance at home. The dozen years between 1944 and 1956 were marked by a number of novel initiatives that established the character of the postwar epoch. Among the least durable of these were the attempts of the European colonial powers to resume their imperial destinies where they had left off before the war. The empires they sought to revive were meant to keep any kind of free trade at a safe distance. An example of this attempted imperial resurrection occurred as early as 1944, when the exiled “Free French” government organized the Brazzaville Conference in the capital of French Equatorial Africa near the mouth of the Congo River. Here, they sketched out utopian designs for launching a renewed empire. In these schemes, independence was not seriously contemplated; a minimal amount of representative government was to be granted. The main object of the conference was, in fact, “neocolonial”: it was to plan for a centralized empire, which would support the rebuilding of a devastated and humiliated France. There was little awareness of the potential strength of the virus of nationalism. In the face of the challenges posed in the immediate postwar Europe, the Europe that had defined its self-image through colonial power and colonial wars over the previous two centuries had to be buried. The definitive break with the old colonial style came as a showdown in 1956. The British and French, with help from Israel, invaded Egypt, ostensibly to reassert their control of the Suez Canal after it had been nationalized by the president of Egypt, Colonel Gamal Nasser. The Americans were furious – partly because these old-style colonial habits were inimical to the new world of open trade, but also because, as luck would have it, this invasion came at virtually the same moment as the Soviet Union invaded Hungary. How could America condemn one invasion without condemning the other? America forced Britain and France into a humiliating climb-down.
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Global Shift the road to preponderant power
The other side of the Atlantic was, more than merely geographically, a world apart from ravaged Europe and colonized Asia and Africa. All of North and South America, including Canada and Mexico, had flourished during the war; not a bomb had fallen over the wide area between Vancouver and Valparaíso or Montreal and Montevideo. Many, such as Ecuador, Venezuela, Brazil, Columbia, and some Central American states, had benefited from wartime economic growth of more than 6 per cent. Of the non-Americans, only the Canadians, still stuck in the rut of sympathy for the British Empire, had even suffered casualties. Canadian troops, like those from India, as well as the “white” dominions of Australia and New Zealand, had died everywhere for Britain and under ultimate British command. Although the whole of the Americas benefited from World War II, it must be emphasized that it was the United States alone that enjoyed the greatest triumph; power, glory, and wealth all flowed in unprecedented infusions. Even before the war the United States had towered above its European rivals in economic terms by a head; after the war it stood alone for its conspicuous wealth, economic potential, and military muscle. American citizens lived in the warm glow of prosperity. American economic preponderance had actually become a fact since the beginning of the First World War. Even then, its annual average growth rate had been almost three times that of Britain or France while its per capita GDP was twice that of Western Europe. In 1945 US industrial production was double the average of the five prewar years; the US produced half the world’s coal, two-thirds of its petroleum, and more than half of its electricity. In 1945 the United States held 80 per cent of the world’s gold and three-quarters of its invested capital. On top of this there was military power: “Its strategic air force was unrivalled. Its navy dominated the seas. It had a monopoly over humanity’s most intimidating weapon, the atomic bomb. The United States had a preponderance of power.”21 The cost? About 300,000 Americans had died in all theatres of war – 70,000 fewer than the British. Compared to Soviet or even German losses, the Americans, the real winners of the war, had got off light. This lead would continue into the 1970s. The war had given the United States an apparently unassailable commercial and technological lead. Both the hubris and the misgivings of American leaders in the postwar period, right up through the unipolar
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period, has to be seen in this light. Hubris was rarely acknowledged; of misgivings, there were several but none greater than the irreducible spread of communism. American concerns over defence had lagged behind the focus on economic growth. Even in 1940, the United States spent only 18 per cent of its federal budget on its military. This changed dramatically after the war. “By 1948, with the Cold War raging and enormous economic aid being sent to Western Europe, 46 per cent of the federal budget was devoted to defence and international affairs. By 1952, with the Korean War, it was 72 percent, and domestic priorities were a thing of the past.”22 But could America prosper if Europe languished in poverty? In Washington, even at the highest levels, there was serious talk about forcing Germany to de-industrialize – if not actually returning to fields and forests, then at least being forced to revert to the kind of backwardness typical of Eastern Europe. Even after the Third Reich had been reduced to rubble, its former enemies still feared a resurgent Germany more than they did the Soviet Union.23 During the war the answer to this question had become obvious to all but the most perverse: world capitalism depended on world markets, and markets could only revive if economies returned to good health and were open. Germany, then, would have to be helped to its feet; after all, if money were put into the pockets of its consumers, it was obvious whose consumer goods they would spend it on. In the three years between the international meetings at Bretton Woods in July 1944 and the announcement of the European Recovery Plan in June 1947, the foundations of the rehabilitation of the economy of the developed capitalist world and the dominance of that world by the United States were laid. At the conference at Bretton Woods, orchestrated by Washington and London, accords tied the US dollar to gold, and other currencies to the US dollar through fixed rates of exchange. Alongside these accords, other institutions were established that sustained American hegemony no less: the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (officially, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the IBRD). Together they would put an end to the economic isolationism that had been so desperately embraced right across the developed world in the 1930s. Isolationism was thus to be replaced by a set of economic assumptions, all de facto American-channeled, that would foster long-term investments, deal with balance-of-payments problems, stabilize currencies, and regulate
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government planning so that it would dance in tune with markets. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), a sister institution, would establish the framework for tariff reduction by means of periodic haggling between vastly unequal national representatives. Both the World Bank and the IMF were to be located in Washington, DC. They were to be the twin towers that replaced the Ozymandine monuments of capitalism in the City of London, the location of the second most important financial centre, which had been the financial heart of global capitalism before World War II. Its fate was to become a remarkably prosperous satellite of Wall Street and the dark heart of offshore capital. While nearly fifty states participated in the founding of the IMF and the World Bank, discussions were actually dominated by two men, J.M. Keynes and Harry Dexter White,24 representatives of the British and the US treasuries respectively. While Keynes was by far the more celebrated as an economic thinker, it was White, with the economic clout of Wall Street behind him, who was bound to triumph. Economic ideas were thus trumped by political weight. Whereas in the peace settlement at the end of World War I, the Europeans had blocked the Americans, at Bretton Woods and later, this was inconceivable. It was this situation, above all, that defeated the American isolationists who hadn’t wanted America to join either world wars and certainly didn’t want their country to get involved in the rehabilitation of postwar Europe. Consequently, writes Jeffry Frieden, “America’s western allies were at the mercy of the United States. Britain and France expressed their concerns forcefully, sometimes even American policy-makers listened; but there was no pretense of an equal partnership. It was easier to ‘sell’ American international involvement at home when this involvement was on American terms.”25 For the next three decades (1944–73) the IMF and the World Bank would carry the “Made in America” guarantee. After this, during the first deep postwar recession of the early 1970s, the Americans jettisoned the Bretton Woods agreements as being cumbersome. In the place of the more universalist regulations that they had formulated, a new regime more blatantly dominated by Wall Street and in the interested of American banking and finance was coaxed into being. Parallel to the Bretton Woods institutions and also dominated by the United States was the United Nations. The United Nations was founded at San Francisco in 1944 and headquartered, apparently for its lifetime, in New York on land donated by the Rockefellers. Its charter was ratified in October 1945, a month after the Japanese surrender, and its General Assembly first met in January 1946. When it was founded,
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Americans, on the whole, were among its firmest supporters. And for good reason: never in its history was the UN anything but sympathetic to US designs, and never were its secretaries-general anything but American nominees. Yet, in fact, in spite of the preponderant influence of the United States over “the free world,” immediately after the end of World War II what lay in the future was anybody’s guess. In Moscow, Joseph Stalin (r. 1922–54), the Soviet dictator, was quite convinced that the capitalist countries would soon again be at one another’s throats. The Americans themselves were more than a little dismayed at the prospects for Europe for two intertwined reasons: first, as we have seen, American prosperity depended upon the recovery of European markets. Second, the spread of communism over most of Eastern Europe and its popularity especially in France and Italy, threatened to close off those markets.26 In response, in what has usually been regarded as an unusual instance of foresight as well as a rare act of international philanthropy, in June 1947, US Secretary of State George C. Marshall announced a program of exports to the barely recovered states of Europe that was intended to simultaneously revive their economies and stimulate the US economy. These were not to be, like Lend-Lease, the 1941 Anglo-US exchange of Atlantic bases for decrepit warships, exchanges, but rather free donations. Marshall, himself, spoke of breaking “the vicious circle and [restoring] the confidence of the European people in their own countries and of Europe as a whole.”27 This was to be known as the European Recovery Program (ERP) or, more commonly, the Marshall Plan. Prosperity, it was quite rightly assumed, was the antidote to communism. The Marshall Plan lasted from 1947 to 1952, and saw $13 billion dispersed to sixteen European countries, especially to Britain and France but also to Greece and Turkey. No state within the Communist sphere benefited, nor did Spain. The Europe “as a whole,” to which Marshall referred, was not to come into existence for nearly half a century. We shall see in the next chapter how Japan and South Korea benefited from American aid that was equivalent to the Marshall Plan. While cavil concerning American intentions was a regular refrain during the Cold War, there can be little doubt that the Europeans benefited hugely from Washington’s magnanimity. In fact, the Marshall Plan remains as the paradigm for foreign aid over the whole postwar period. By 1952 when ERP aid was ended, Europe was confidently on the way to postwar recovery. Whereas Western European per capita output had doubled in the sixty years between 1870 and 1929, it doubled again in
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the fifteen years between 1948 and 1964. The United States was, in any case, now securely in control of all of the major institutions of political and economic importance in the West – the World Bank, the IMF, the ERP, the United Nations and, from 1949, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). From 1961, the United States, and the economies whose growth had been fostered by American support, formed a club known as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Here was the engine room and pilot house of the West. This organization, too, was American dominated. Excepting those who nourished illusions about a postwar community of equal nations, none of this was a mystery. As two neo-conservative commentators, Robert Kagan and William Kristol, were to crow in 2000, when American dominance still seemed unshakeable: Today’s international system is built not around a balance of power but around American hegemony. The international financial institutions were fashioned by Americans and serve American interests. The international security structures are chiefly a collection of American-led alliances. What Americans like to call international “norms” are really reflections of American and West European principles. Since today’s relatively benevolent circumstances are the product of our hegemonic influence, any lessening of that influence will allow others to play a larger part in shaping the world to suit their needs … American hegemony, then, must be actively maintained, just as it was actively obtained.28
“ the east is red ” In direct opposition to this Western world dominated by America stood the East. With the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, a new kind of empire had been created to rule over the extensive territories of Central Asia. After 1945 Soviet influence extended over the countries of Eastern Europe liberated from the German occupation by the Red Army. These included the eastern half of the smaller postwar Germany, as well as the former independent Baltic and Eastern European states. This broad polyglot expanse of Eurasia became known as the Soviet Bloc, and it remained in existence until December 1991. Within this Bloc, the Communist Party became the equivalent of the established church; dissent was regarded as apostasy, with suitably cruel punishments. Indeed, under Josef Stalin there were hundreds of thousands of political executions.
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Over the other countries in the Soviet Bloc, Moscow established protectorate colonialism in the name of socialism. The economies of states from the Baltic to the Black Sea came to be integrated with and subordinated to the economy of the Soviet Union. But the Soviet threat was not the only one causing anxiety in Washington. Even in the West, communism in this period was only slightly off the peak of its 1930s popularity. Communist ideology, of course, had lived and even gained supporters right across Eurasia since the Russian Revolution in 1917 and elsewhere in Asia. And in the New World, from New York to Buenos Aires, it also had fervent adherents, especially among intellectuals. Given the devastation wrought by the Germans on the Soviet Union itself, and on Poland, and acknowledging the economic and social backwardness of most of Eastern Europe, not to mention the lack of access to American capital, it could hardly be expected that the economic growth of the communist Second World would be miraculous. Yet, in 1969, Nikita Khrushchev (r. 1953–64), boasted that by 1970, or even sooner, the Soviet Union would leave the United States standing in its dust, and even intelligent anti-communists took this seriously. But after an initial spurt in the 1950s when national income growth reached a respectable 5.7 per cent per annum, Soviet economic performance stalled. By the beginning of the 1970s, it had fallen to 3.7 per cent and by 1980–85 to 2 per cent. “Having displayed considerable vitality in many spheres, from the early 1970s the Soviet Union entered into a downswing, before swinging definitively into stagnation.”29 Although by the 1970s the standard of living of Soviet citizens was higher than it ever had been, and it was rising in Eastern Europe, most Poles, Czechs, and Hungarians simply resented the imposition of Soviet rule, with rebellions being crushed by Soviet tanks in 1956 and 1968. The allies of the Soviet Union also were expected to move briskly into the future, and share the fruits of communist production, within the framework of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON), the communist equivalent of the European Union, founded in 1954. Perhaps surprisingly, by the early 1990s, the economic pecking order of the newly independent states of Eastern Europe was much as it had been before World War II. East Germany and Czechoslovakia were the most advanced, Poland was in the middle, and the Balkan states, Bulgaria and Rumania, were the most backward. Still, communism may seem to have been more of a failure in retrospect than it ever was in reality. In his book, Russia: The Once and
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Future Empire from Pre-History to Putin, Philip Longworth summarizes the Soviet trajectory. Despite rumblings of discontent in one or two COMECON countries, the Soviet Empire in 1980s seemed stable and reasonably successful. The Soviet Union itself had not caught up with the United States in terms of economic output … but it was incontestably a world power, it peoples more prosperous and freer than in the 1950s. True, the Communist movement was no longer a dynamic force in the world, but Moscow was still a beacon of hope for poorer countries, and also for some less poor that wished to distance themselves from American culture and the embraces of capitalism. Even though the system had not yet quite succeeded in replacing nationalism with a supranational Marxist faith, no informed observer seriously expected the vast and powerful Soviet fortress … to suffer any marked decline in the foreseeable future. Yet within a dozen years … it simply evaporated.30 With the dissolution of the Soviet Union and its empire, that is, the collapse of the Second World, there emerged a universe of newly independent states in Eastern Europe, most of whom now queued to join the European Union. Capitalism was back. The Americans now saw themselves, quite reasonably, as masters of the universe: Madeleine Albright, the US secretary of state, put this emphatically in 1998 when defending the bombing of Iraq: “If we have to use force, it is because we are America. We are the indispensable nation. We stand tall. We see further into the future.”31 Others, like Kagan and Kristol whom we have seen above, took up chorus and continued to celebrate America’s heroic singularity into the opening years of the twenty-first century.32 Few thought seriously about China, a communist state that had taken a different road since it had shifted, at least ostensibly, from a centrally planned state to a market economy in 1978. The government of the People’s Republic (PRc) had remained a close ally of the Soviet Union throughout the 1950s; as a result of this massive bloc, the fevers of the Cold War reached their most delirious levels. Throughout Southeast Asia and across the Middle East, in the 1950s there were numerous non-communist regimes and political leaders that tolerated local communists (up to a point) or were downright proMoscow – Sukarno in Indonesia, Nasser in Egypt, Mossadeq in Iran, Sihanouk in Cambodia, Iraq after the 1959 revolution, and Algeria
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after 1962. And then, of course, from 1959 there was Cuba, a “satellite” in the eyes of Western leaders, a valuable ally in the eyes of Moscow. Later there would be friendships between Moscow and various African regimes: in Ethiopia, Mozambique, and Angola, and between these regimes and Cuba. There would also be treaties of friendship between independent Asian and African states and China. Taking stock of the whole epoch, 1945 to 2007, what is remarkable is not only the rise and disappearance of the Third World and the demise of the Second, Communist, World, but also, in the declining years of this period and in the period that immediately followed, the apparent subsidence of the US-dominated First, so-called Atlantic World.33 We have not seen the likes of this magnitude of change on a global scale for two centuries, since the period of the revolutions, economic and political, in Britain, France, and the Caribbean and the Seven Years’ War. the third world
Of the outcomes that concern us here, those of the west European, American, and communist worlds are of less interest than that of the “Third World.” This world, a fitfully imagined community of mainly postcolonial states, supposedly emerged between the capitalist West and the communist East from the end of World War II. It survived, notionally at least, from the early 1950s, when it was given its name without ceremony, to c. 1991, the year of the death of the Second World and the end of the division of the geopolitical globe into three spheres. The year 1991, and the decade that followed it, marked not only the death of the 1950s version of the three worlds, but also the triumph of a US-guided, universalist capitalism that, in the words of one writer, and to the choking indignation of doubters, marked the end of history. Thus it came to pass in the postwar period, as America triumphed, colonialism died and communism spread, the Third World was given life.34 The period from the 1950s to the mid-1970s were, in Asia and Africa, a Third World golden age. By 1956 many of the former colonial states on these two dominated continents were already independent; the former League of Nations Mandates in the Middle East (Iraq, Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon, but not Palestine) had been let go, at least formally, either before or during World War II; India and Burma had been freed; Pakistan was invented in 1947; and Ceylon was given independence in 1948. And more of the same appeared to be coming in the future – the French had been defeated at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, the year that
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the war in Algeria had begun. A year later the Gold Coast (Ghana) became independent, and, four years later, the most populous state in Africa, Nigeria, followed it. By the end of the 1960s, most of Africa had gained political independence. In a parallel demonstration of the possibilities of liberation, in the Caribbean, long considered an “American lake,” Fidel Castro and his armed companions had set sail from Mexico to liberate their homeland. On the first week of 1959 they walked into Havana. Then came the defeat of America in Vietnam in the mid-1970s and a period of Soviet diplomatic achievement especially in Ethiopia and Yemen. It should be made clear, however, that the former imperial countries only reluctantly and begrudgingly became resigned to their fates. On the eve of the Suez crisis, when the British were still optimistic about the future, the British politician and later prime minister, Harold Macmillan (r. 1957–63), confided to his diary: “If we lose Singapore, it’s a terrible blow to all our Far Eastern interests.”35 Macmillan had made his views clear that what lay ahead for Britain was a choice between “the slide into a shoddy and slushy Socialism (as a second-rate power), or the march to the third British Empire.”36 As the vision of the third empire slipped away, the spectre of the shoddy and slushy British version of socialism got closer. Meanwhile in Latin America the dream of democracy and economic development fell under a shadow. From 1954 when the United States effectively ousted the democratically elected government of Guatemala, US interventions in Latin America continued to rise, cresting in the epoch of the dictatorships of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile between 1964, the year of the coup in Brazil, and 1983, the year of free elections in Argentina. We should also recall that the wars that Washington launched against the peasants and other reformists of Latin America were as brutal as any colonial wars of the twentieth century.37 Of course, in Asia and Africa there were also counter tendencies to the general movement for emancipation: in South Africa the racist apartheid regime strengthened itself both economically and militarily against its rivals, especially from 1948, while the equally exclusivist Israeli settler state was tightening its grip on the lands and the bodies of the Palestinians. The white settlers in Southern Rhodesia also had their decade of delirious expectation, although, in record time, the applause faded and this was over.38 Both the apartheid regime and that of Israel were backed by Washington and its allies; for the UN, despite innumerable meetings, commissions, and even occasional peeps of protest, the message was “hands off.”
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One of the most ambiguous examples of the forward march of Third World independence being halted was the Chinese invasion and annexation of Tibet in October 1950. China had long claimed suzerainty over Tibet,39 it is true, but then France had claimed suzerainty over Algeria for more than a century, and Portugal over Angola and Mozambique for even longer. The Chinese invasion received not a word of protest from Nehru’s India, which was recently independent and at the forefront of the struggle for an independent Third World. Nehru was to pay dearly for this complacency when China invaded India in October 1962. While the People’s Liberation Army of China withdrew from Indian territory, the Chinese occupation of Tibet has only become more entrenched with time. China is thus the sole example of a Eurasian empire that actually expanded in terrestrial terms in the postwar period. As late as 2006, with the completion of a railway line linking Beijing and Lhasa, this expansion became more secure. China’s hammerlock on Xinjiang proceeded on a parallel track. As Asia rose – first Japan, then South Korea and the other Asian Tigers, and finally China – American political dominance in the region wavered, but not without a ferocious rearguard action in the Middle East and Central Asia. It may be possible to pinpoint the beginning of the arc of America’s postwar strategic decline to 1968, the year the great protests in the West (and especially in France) and of Tet;40 for this was the year of the first major US trade deficit and of the devaluation of the dollar. By then the US was suffering severe competition not so much from the devils it knew – the communists – but from the devils that had blindsided them, these being in the form of capitalist rivals in Europe and Japan and even from the parts of eastern Asia in which America itself had facilitated industrialization for strategic purposes. In any case, while there have been many turning points in the history of the postwar world, 1968 is doubtless one of them. With the Bandung Conference of Third World leaders in 1955,41 the first Nonaligned Foreign Ministers’ Conference of 1972, and the simultaneous rise of leaders like Nasser, Sukarno, and Nkrumah, alongside Nehru and Zhou Enlai, the idea of neutral, tricontinental (Asia-AfricaLatin America) solidarity, if not any coherent and effective program, began to take uncertain shape. There was every reason to think that this Third World, might liberate itself and become an independent and decisive player in world politics. The defeat of the United States in Vietnam seemed to confirm this. “Liberation” was thus the leitmotif of the period of 1950 to 1975. Of course, the separation of Third World countries
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from the sphere of Western influence, and, even worse, their neutralism, was deplored. As the American Secretary of State John Foster Dulles claimed, “the concept of neutrality is obsolete, immoral, and shortsighted.”42 The thought of Nehru, intellectual, independent, vaguely hostile to the United States, made him seethe. development , or not
As I shall argue again in Chapter 8, it was during this period of liberation that the ideology of “development” was re-invented. Development was a Western idea of nineteenth-century origin. Reformist, its object was guided amelioration; it should always be paired, therefore, with the words “stable” and “controlled.” Development enthusiasts sought to ensure that Third World countries should benefit from economic and social improvement prudently, under the guidance of the West, and quarantined from the Communist bloc. This idea of development was not without its own family relationships; it was the cousin of “modernization” and niece of “Westernization.” All these ideologies descended, ultimately, from the same ideological touchstone, the confident notion of a binary separation of the civilizations of West and East. Development was therefore, put in the crudest of terms, a charitable means of control of the Third World, like poor relief in Victorian England was meant to control the dangerous poor. In its postwar form, while it claimed that it was mutually beneficial to Africa and the colonial states of Europe, the main objective of development was the resurrection of the economies of Britain and France. American development objectives were only slightly different: “Washington’s main concerns were the Cold War with the Soviet Union and the economic organization of the core areas of the capitalist world in ways that would firmly tie the underdeveloped world to their needs” (italics mine).43 Advocates of development, especially in its Cold War heyday (c. 1950–90) normally sought to tie the underdeveloped world to the needs of the core areas of the capitalist West. Of course after 1990, by which time the Cold War had ended, East Asia had long since become “developed,” the Third World had disappeared, and “development” came to refer to Western policies, both predatory and philanthropic, towards Africa. Liberation was thus the antithesis of development. Liberation was normally national liberation; national emancipation was at its heart. The Americans who had forgotten their own revolutionary traditions distrusted national liberation; for it smacked of radical nationalism and
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a loss of control. They tended to inflate its objects, referring to it as “extreme nationalism” or “ultranationalism” and to demonize its leaders as “communists” or, later, “radical populists.”44 Radical nationalism, and especially radical economic nationalism, was the antithesis of the objects of international economic order founded at Bretton Woods and solidified in the decades that followed. The US National Security Council (NSC), founded in 1947, the same year as the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), was at the heart of American policy making, and was the main source of what has been called “visionary globalism.” Its ideologues argued that “nationally organized economies were ultimately inconsistent with long-term American interests and were thus to be opposed.”45 It was clear to all those who looked that there could be only one centre of capitalism. Liberation struggles were ubiquitous in the postwar world, and their roots may be found in the nineteenth century. The guerrilla was their icon; guerrillas fought not only to liberate their homelands but to destroy the oligarchies that ruled them once they were liberated. In the postwar period, Ernesto “Che” Guevara was the most famous guerrilla poster person but there were many others – Algerians, Angolans, Annamese, Argentines, Afghanis. The normal, but not inevitable, fate of guerrillas was to be gunned down either by agents of colonialism – such was the case of Amílcar Cabral (1924–1973) who led the struggle for the independence of the Portuguese colony of Guiné – by Americans or by governments and institutions that they supported. In Latin America, Che Guevara was such a victim, and the Condor Plan was such an institution.46 Guerrillas, whose ideologies were normally secular, sought to liberate in order to create new or even renewed nations, each expressing its own form of national political modernism. They had no unifying ideology – some were communists, some primitive rebels, others nationalists, or, much later, mujahidun. The mujahidun were not the only religious nationalists; many Latin American Catholics were too.47 The latter had made the connection between religion and liberation and called their philosophy “liberation theology.” This, too, was anathematized by the Vatican as well as the State Department, and many of its adherents were murdered. By their enemies, guerrillas were called “bandits,” “terrorists,” “insurrectionaries,” “insurgents,” or worse.48 The era of the guerrilla, the age of liberation, overlaps both the beginning and the end of the era of the Third World: guerrillas were born in the nineteenth century and are alive and well in the twenty-first.49 In the decades after World War II,
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guerrilla bands were active in places as far apart as Greece, Aden, Kenya, Malaysia, Cuba, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Argentina, Angola, Mozambique, Nepal, and even India. It could be argued that the fear of the guerrilla, as much as any philanthropy on the part of governments, was the main stimulus for the dogmas of development that unfolded in the West.
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2 The Sony Also Rises: Japan’s Undulations On top of … [Japan’s] … concern with brute industrial strength – natural in a country whose entire modern history essentially constitutes a desperate quest to avoid domination by capricious foreigners whose motives could never be trusted – has been the unique legacy of a political and social order that has not been overturned in its most fundamental aspects for 800 years … Thus we see the obsession on the part of Japan’s governing class with the maintenance of social peace, and a nearly pathological aversion to anything that potentially threatens disorder or a loss of social control. Indeed, Japan’s 125-year-long drive for technological self-sufficiency and overwhelming industrial might is really part and parcel of the overall efforts to neutralize any threat to the existing order. R. Taggart Murphy, “Japan’s Economic Crisis,” New Left Review
introduction
The origins of the Japanese empire are in the late nineteenth century, and its downfall came only decades before that of the European empires in Asia. In common with the European empires, imperial Japan sought security, stability, and a degree of grandeur. In order to assure these it needed industrial raw materials, cheap food imports, and markets. The raw materials were essential to sustain its heavy industries, which in turn supported its armies and navies, in competition with older and more mature economies – especially Britain and the United States; the cheap food imports, like sugar and rice, sustained its increasingly urbanized and proletarianized population. Unlike Germany, Italy, and Belgium, all of which had become unified states only as a consequence of economic change in the nineteenth century, Japan, as Taggart Murphy has pointed out, had always been, in effect, united and coherent. The origins of its court, in 660 CE, anticipate that of all European states. Certainly from the sixteenth century, a
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centralized, culturally mature, if remarkably feudal, Japan already existed. Until the middle of the nineteenth century this feudal state remained largely isolated from the increasingly globalized world; only the most carefully invigilated trickle of foreign goods and ideas were allowed to seep into the country, and those through a single port. As for foreigners, while they were ubiquitous from Peru to India, in Japan they were obsessively restricted, and even shipwrecked sailors were shown little mercy. Japanese scholars interested in Western ideas thus lived dangerously. Then, suddenly, after the visit of a small flotilla of American gunboats in 1852, Japan’s ruling group realized that, unless it transformed itself, their country would fall prey to Western expansionism in the same way that neighbouring China had. Radical institutional change, as it has since been called, followed as the Japanese ruling class speedily reformed itself by means of a velvety and thus bloodless revolution. From 1867 began a new era. The emperor, who for centuries had been eclipsed by an official known as the shogun, was led back onto the stage, his divinity was exalted and the shogun rusticated. Japan now made the transition from feudalism to industrial capitalism at greater speed and with more enduring effect than has any country anywhere in modern history. Yet, while other countries steered themselves in the twin wakes of the American and French Revolutions towards republicanism and constitutionalism, the Japanese political system was kept deliberately in the premodern mould. The oligarchy that surrounded the emperor, many of them knights (samurai) of the ancien régime who had become Japan’s new ruling class, would remain pathologically suspicious of any form of democracy until after the Second World War. And even then they would prefer single-party rule to the dangerous disequilibrium that a multi-party system might provoke. Within only two decades after the reform of 1867, Japan had burst out of its pre-capitalist economy and was industrializing; out went handicrafts, in came textile factories – to the dismay of the British, the dominant imperialists in Asia whose share of global cotton exports plummeted. Here was the first intimation of the mortality of Western economic superiority, demonstrated by an Asian economy that would drive the leading European industrial economy to the edge. Paralleling its phenomenal industrial growth, by the 1930s Japan had become one of the world’s leading military powers with a navy that could be compared to that of the British, the world’s leading sea-power. The significance of this should not be overlooked: from the early nineteenth century, the Europeans and Americans had ruled the waves and
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many of the shores against which they lapped. The Mediterranean, the Caribbean, the Atlantic, and the Pacific were Western lakes. Now Asian warships backed by Asian industry had made a dramatic entry. The history of East Asia was quite suddenly on the road to a convulsive and dramatic change that, within a century, would see it turn global economic and political relations upside down. The role of war and empire in the expansion of Japanese heavy industry is conspicuous. War with China (1894–95), with Russia (1904–05), and the invasions of Korea in 1910 and Manchuria in 1932, all stimulated war-related industry. Even World War I, in which the Japanese took no direct part, had a positive effect on industrial growth. Later, wars in China from 1932 to 1945, as well as the Korean War from 1950 to 1953, and the American-Vietnamese War from 1965 to 1975, all contributed their tonic effects on the Japanese economy. By the 1920s, the first stage of Japanese industrialization had been completed. National income had grown from 2,300 million yen in 1890 to 12,700 in 1930. In ways broadly comparable to the countries of Western Europe, primary industries had decreased in importance, secondary (manufacturing) industry had trebled, and tertiary industry (including commerce) had almost doubled. Japan had gone, roughly between 1870 and 1930, from being a land dominated by agriculture with small export and import sectors to a land characterized by the formidable development of heavy and medium industry, and one fully engaged in world trade. In roughly the same period, the population had increased by nearly 50 per cent. While class distinctions that had separated nobles, knights, and peasants were eroded, the state remained strong with political power remaining concentrated in the hands of an oligarchy drawn from the upper reaches of society. violent transformations , 1894–1945
The Japanese Empire lasted from 1894 to 1945; its lifespan was thus significantly shorter than that of the greatest of the European empires – the Russian, the British, the Dutch, the French, and the Portuguese – but respectable compared to such twentieth-century nouveaux empires as those of the Belgians, Italians, and the Germans. The birthdate of Japan’s overseas expansion was 1894, when the Japanese took Taiwan from China as well as gained control of the Pescadores and the Liaodong peninsula in southern Manchuria. After seizing control of Korea in 1910, Japan expanded further into Manchuria.
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Korea had been a Chinese tributary and Manchuria a Chinese province, but the Chinese, disorganized and economically backward, were inefficient guardians of their customary domains. But the most sensational achievement of the Japanese was at the cost to Russia’s Asian ambitions. In February 1904 the rivalry between Japan and Russia over spheres of influence in North-East Asia boiled over. In a naval engagement the Russians were decisively defeated by the superior Japanese navy and conceded both Lushun at the end of the Liaodong peninsula and half of the Sakhalin peninsula. Sometimes seen as the beginning of the twentieth-century Asian political revival, this victory led to Japanese rule over a crescent at the centre of which stood the Japanese home islands with the tips pointing to Siberia and Manchuria. As W.G. Beasley explains in Japanese Imperialism, By victories over China in 1894–95 and Russia in 1904–05 Japan became a world power, entering into rivalries which required a much larger military establishment than in the past. Increased spending on armaments and war-related industry had repercussions throughout the economy. Participation – at arm’s length – in the world war of 1914–18 had two further effects; it provided an export demand for the products of Japanese heavy industry … and it reduced for a time the availability of foreign machinery of almost every kind, so increased the opportunities enjoyed by Japanese manufactures at home. Thus war made for faster growth in heavy industry that might otherwise had taken place. It also furnished government with additional reasons to intervene in that sector of the economy [and justified government overseas investment in] concerns like the South Manchuria Railway Company … In addition, there were subsidies for shipbuilding and shipping, as well as indirect help in the form of official contracts.1 Manchuria now became the focus of Japanese investment and development. The formula of Japanese capital + forced Chinese labour = handsome profits assured both the Japanese capitalists and the Japanese state that colonialism was the direction of the future – and led directly to the markets and manpower of China. Full-scale war began in the summer of 1937. The Japanese armies moved south from Manchuria, taking Shanghai in the summer and Nanjing, the Chinese capital, in December.2 The rape of Nanjing was
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one of the most fearsome of the atrocities committed by colonial or fascist regimes anywhere in the twentieth century. In 1942 and 1943 the Japanese armies in China, pursuing a policy of “kill all, loot all, burn all,” killed over two million civilians. The Chinese government fled southwards, ultimately to Chongqing. Easy victories on the mainland and the lurking fear that rival powers might choke off Japan’s access to vital strategic resources overseas led Tokyo to form an alliance with the Germans and Italians. The Germans, especially, were motivated by the same fear as the Japanese – that of enclosure and of the growth of their rivals, especially America but also the British and Soviet Empires. After all, 80 per cent of Japanese oil came from the United States, the world’s largest producer. The Japanese found no difficulties in recognizing the fascist new order in Europe, and the Germans and Italians in return accepted Japan’s domination of East and even Southeast Asia. Only a little later, in 1942, after war with the Americans and their allies had broken out, did the Japanese formally announce the creation of the Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere, an empire in all but name exhibiting the same spurious claims of all empires, namely, that the subjects would prosper alongside the conquerors. Relations between Japan and the United States had worsened through 1940 as Washington demanded that Japan withdraw from China and threatened to embargo oil shipments. In Japan, a war party of military adventurers and imperial advocates, supported by the emperor, had come to power after having destroyed their rivals by terror and assassination. Victories in Korea and China, and against the Russians, in the past half century had convinced them that the Americans, too, could be confronted. In a gamble as desperate as the German invasion of France in 1939, on 7 December 1941, the Japanese carried out a surprise aerial attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbour in Hawaii, crippling much of the US Pacific fleet. “I never thought those little yellow sons-of-bitches could pull off such an attack, so far from Japan,” complained Admiral Kimmel, the commander of the Pacific fleet.3 The Americans responded with outrage at what one military historian later referred to as Tokyo’s “strategic imbecility.” Like the Japanese, they, too, had been history’s victors: the extension of US control over Latin America had been implacable, and they had been on the winning side in the Spanish-American War, which gave them colonies in the Pacific as well as the Caribbean. No one had attacked them since the British
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burned down Washington in 1814. Now, for a fleeting moment, it looked like their authority in the East would be reversed and the Pacific would become a Japanese lake. That moment lasted until early June 1942 when, in a great naval battle near the island of Midway, the Americans smashed the Japanese navy. Between Pearl Harbour and Midway, in the flash of time from December 1941 and June 1942, the Japanese had conquered and gained control of most of Southeast Asia – French Indochina had effectively been handed over by the Vichy regime; the great British base at Singapore had fallen, while Malaya, Burma, the Philippines, and the Dutch East Indies had all surrendered. Even India had been invaded. After the battle at Midway, with what in hindsight might seem like inevitability given the immense economic power of the United States, the tide of empire ebbed. As the Americans advanced across Southeast Asia, the Japanese, their navy shattered and their army slaughtered, withdrew; the empire that had expanded so wonderfully now collapsed painfully. The end came in August 1945 after the Americans, who had firebombed sixty-four Japanese cities, dropped atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Let me quote the elegy of Mikiso Hane for what proved to be one of the most audacious if brutal of the world’s twentieth-century empires. The aftermath of war and defeat found Japan in an appalling condition … Most of its major cities lay in ruin … Nationwide about eight million people had become homeless … At the end of the war industrial production stood at barely 10 per cent of the normal prewar level … For the entire year of 1946, it remained at 30.7 percent of the 1934–1936 level. Territorially Japan was now back to where it was when Commodore Perry arrived in 1853. It was compelled to relinquish Taiwan, the Pescadores, Korea, and Southern Sakhalin. The Kuriles were now occupied by the Soviet Union and Okinawa was placed under US administration.4 The Japanese used the term yaki-nohara, “burnt plain,” to describe their cities in 1945. “They were vast expanses of charred ruins. In many areas, as far as the eye could see, what were once thriving commercial districts, quiet residential neighbourhoods, and bustling factory zones were burnt rubble. An estimated 2.7 million Japanese soldiers, sailors, airmen, and civilians had been killed between the attack on Pearl Harbour … and the
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cessation of hostilities.”5 Six and a half million were still stranded in Asia and the Pacific, many of whom never made it back to Japan. Japan itself had lost all claims to being a great power; it had regressed from the status of itto¯ koku, a country in the first rank, to that of yonto¯ koku, a fourth rate country. It had lost 3 to 4 per cent of its 1940 population of about seventy-four million. An estimated 179,000 Japanese civilians and 66,000 military personnel perished in Manchuria in the winter that followed the Japanese surrender. Of the 400,000 estimated to have fallen into the hands of the Soviet armies, less than a quarter were accounted for. resurrection , 1945–1970
With a speed that amazed all observers, Japan rose again within a couple of decades to the front of the first rank of world economic powers. By the 1970s, resurgence had been completed; by the beginning of the twenty-first century, Japan was the world’s second-largest economy with a G D P greater than those of Britain and France combined. By 1950, then, the Japanese economy was out of the woods. The new, civilian, leaders of Japan had focussed on continuing the industrial revolution that had been diverted to serve military purposes. Japanese success was no longer measurable on maps that charted its domination of its neighbours but, instead, by statistics that demonstrated its hurtling industrial and especially export achievements. These were matched at home by its extraordinarily high per capita GDP and virtually universal literacy.6 Although the darker tendencies in Japanese politics had been utterly discredited with the surrender of September 1945 and the occupation of Japan by US forces, except in the very short run big business suffered the loss of neither political power nor prestige. Thus when we consider Japan’s postwar resurrection and success, we should not separate business and politics; in Japan, the one – business – was the dog that wagged the other. In China, as we shall see below, an opposite model prevailed: the Chinese Communist Party was the dog that willed the wagging, even after the transition to capitalism was made at the end of the twentieth century. In any case, it would be possible to argue that the main business of the Japanese state was business. In this interpretation Japan thus becomes an artless and affectless state of business, unrivalled in either its efficiency or its cultural insecurity by any advanced economy in the world.
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The benignly contemptuous American forces that occupied Japan in late 1945 were remarkable in several respects. Unlike the Allies who occupied defeated Germany, the Americans knew virtually nothing of Japan; it goes without saying that few could speak Japanese. Brimming with the victors’ bluff self-confidence, they nonetheless set out in the most high-minded way to teach the former enemy the rudiments of decent, democratic political life, American-style. This was indeed their civilizing mission, now christened “Americanization.” Yet, although they conceived of themselves as superior as a civilization (and also racially superior), the Americans did not see the Japanese as being subjects in the colonial sense. They were a defeated enemy that was capable, it was earnestly believed, of rehabilitation. “Outlaw Japan was to be rendered a peaceful, democratic, law-abiding nation by eradicating the very roots of militarism.” By establishing rule according to the “will of the people,” the Americans would extirpate the evil of the “will to war.”7 The head of the occupying forces in Japan, known as the Supreme Commander of Allied Powers (SCAP), was the American general, Douglas MacArthur, a dogmatic and imperious character who resembled one of the numerous British proconsuls and viceroys of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in his messianic self-esteem. He compared the Japanese to American twelve-year-olds. MacArthur stripped Japan of its military apparatus and purged the country of its militarists, hanging a few in the full glare of publicity for effect. The greatest of the war criminals, Emperor Hirohito (1901–1989), he preserved, on the argument that without him the Japanese, who had come to regard him as divine, would be difficult to manage. This was at best a doubtful proposition; the Germans had, after all, adapted to living without their Führer almost overnight. Like Germany at the end of the Second World War, Japan had been forced to abandon its militarism and its chauvinism. General MacArthur, almost immediately upon his arrival promulgated “five great reforms” involving (1) “emancipation of the women of Japan through their enfranchisement”; (2) “encouragement of the unionization of Labour”; (3) liberalization of the education system; (4) creation of a “system of justice designed to afford the people protection against despotic, arbitrary and unjust methods”; and (5) “democratization of Japanese economic institutions to ensure wide distribution of income and ownership.” In the first postwar election in April 1946, thirty-nine women were elected to the lower house of the Diet, the Japanese parliament.8 Japan’s relationship with the United States was clearly established and would
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not change over the next half century; the principle of incorporation and subordination established during the occupation meant that Japan would always remain not merely an economic ally of the United States but a unique kind of valet state, ostensibly independent but unwaveringly faithful. Even as the credibility of US global hegemony was shrinking, Japan, dominated by the Liberal Democratic Party, remained in an obedient trance. As for the zaibatsu, the monopolistic firms that had profited from and backed imperial expansion, these were abolished. However, they soon re-formed, attired in the sheep’s clothing of the banks that they controlled. The conglomerates of cooperating firms and banks were now known as the keiretsu. More successful as a reform was the forced sale to their tenants of the lands belonging to semi-feudal landholders. This was to have a long-term effect of Japanese politics; for the newly endowed landowners were to become a well-organized political constituency. As elsewhere, not only in Asia but in Europe, in the postwar years, a militant labour movement, whose organizations had been proscribed by the former militarist regime, sprang back to life. Allied with it was a coalition of communists and socialists. In May 1947 this coalition organ ized a general strike to demonstrate its power. As many as five million people pledged to support it. But the strike never took place as General MacArthur forbade it. So, also as elsewhere in the postwar world, from Latin America to Europe and Asia American, power showed itself willing to accommodate political monsters, like Hirohito, and compromise with business, even when it was tainted with fascism and stained with the blood of millions. But it was not willing to take any chances with labour or leftism, no matter how popular, or even heroic, its past record had been. Japan’s postwar recovery might have been more uncertain and turbulent had it not been for the Korean War that began in June 1950. The war, which I shall discuss further in Chapter 4, was a challenge to the new American role in East Asia and an opportunity for Japan. It was also a disaster for Korea and a threat to China. When the Korean War broke out in 1950, the forward base for the American campaign was Japan. Not only were American forces brigaded here but they also were supplied by Japanese industry. Military industry went from low to high gear in a matter of months. Suddenly, Sony, which supplied electronic goods, and other manufacturers recovered the overseas business that they had lost with defeat. The goods the Americans bought they paid for with vital foreign currency. Japan’s
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foreign exchange situation now brightened while increased demand for manufactured goods translated to improved employment prospects for Japan’s restive working class. To the Japanese prime minister, Shigeru Yoshida (r. 1946–54) the war was “a gift from the gods.” In 1952 the occupation of Japan was brought to an end by the San Francisco Peace Treaty. The Japanese state, its hands now unbound, stepped in to reoccupy the Promethian role it had enjoyed since the late nineteenth century, minus empire and armed forces. Using the Japanese Development Bank, it directed funds to the sectors it wanted to promote, particularly in the area of heavy industries such as electric power, coal, shipping, and steel. Other industries were encouraged by means of tax exemptions. Since foreign exchange was in short supply, the government apportioned it, providing it to firms that sought to purchase foreign technology, especially from the United States, the most advanced of the capitalist economies, but withholding it from those whose purposes were judged to be less vital. The government encouraged the application of imported technologies to infant industries such as electronics. On the other hand, foreign imports were discouraged; Japanese consumers had a choice between Japanese goods or nothing. Some of the results of state-directed planning were evident immediately. Massive investment in the latest technologies for steel production contributed to the rebirth of Japan’s shipbuilding industry that, as early as the 1950s, came to be the world’s leader. Then, in the mid-1950s, came a radical shift in developmental policies. Up to this point Japan’s planners had been satisfied with providing goods for the domestic market, including the markets for Japanese goods created by the American war in Korea. Now a new strategy emerged, subsequently called Export-Led Industrialization. As the name implies, Japan’s economy now became focussed on overseas markets and especially the most luscious market of all, that of the United States. The consequences of this new program were monumental, as we shall see below and in the following chapters when we discuss the industrialization of East Asia. They were also to be especially remarkable for the effect they were to ultimately have on the US economy, and especially the balance of payments. Although changing its strategic focus from internal to external, the Japanese industrial model not only retained its prewar monopolies but also a form of its prewar style of labour relations. In 1953, as the wartime boom continued, the workers at Nissan, the car manufacturer, went on strike. Among other demands, including better wages and more
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control on the factory floor, the leaders of the Nissan strike wanted to organize an industry-wide union, an equivalent, say, of the Canadian Auto Workers Union. The strike was strenuously opposed by the Nissan management, who, supported by the managements of other automakers, held out against the strikers, virtually starving them back to work. With the ending of the strike came the end of the possibility of an industry-wide union. In its place would be company unions. The workers in these unions would find that company loyalty, not union solidarity, was the best guarantee of security. They now became soldiers conscripted in company armies for life. In exchange for the acceptance of no strikes or stoppages, or of any form of workers’ control, and of wage clawbacks, there would be no layoffs. Conformity was now the mother of security. This system was applied alike to public sector and large export-oriented firms. The docility of the Japanese working class from this point surprised outside viewers, especially Americans. So, too, did Japanese labour productivity that more than doubled between the 1960s and the 1980s. By the 1960s Japan had entered the fast growth lane of the highway to industrial capitalist heaven. In that decade overall, Japanese GNP grew at an annual average rate of 11.6 per cent. How did this compare to Europe, also ravaged by war and dislocation? “In the course of the 1950s, the average annual rate at which per capita national output grew in West Germany was 6.5 per cent; in Italy 5.3 per cent; in France 3.5 per cent. The significance of such high and sustained growth rates is best appreciated when they are compared with the same countries’ performance in earlier decades; in the years 1913–1950 the German growth rate per annum was just 6.4 per cent, the Italian 6.6 per cent, the French 0.7 per cent.”9 So while parts of Western Europe grew fast, Japan grew even faster. The multilateral removal of barriers to trade was the key to this fast growth; for it was this that exports, and especially exports to the United States, depended on. But could Japan maintain its lead in a world in which the numbers of exporters increased and the cost of production was lowered by poorer entrants into the race? Nor were these the only problems to confront the world economy, although certain others, such as environmental costs, were virtually invisible. By 1973 it was clear that a new epoch had arrived in the history of Japan’s postwar capitalist development. In 1955 farm workers and others in the primary sector formed 41 per cent of the labour force. In 1974 agricultural employment was down to a mere 14 per cent. Massive emigration into the cities from the rural areas had taken place and the
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sararii-man, the white-collared employee on a fixed salary, had been born. “Between 1955 and 1974, the dollar value of Japanese exports increased twenty-five times over. So did the value of its imports. Japan found itself poised to supply exactly what the world was demanding in greatest quantity; steel, fabricated metal products, ships, and precision equipment. Near the end of the era it added automobiles, business equipment, and audio and video equipment to this list. The sale of these export earned the currency Japan needed to pay for its imports; petroleum and other energy sources, industrial raw materials, and food products.”10 Appropriately, it was the United States, the world’s leading capitalist state and, as such, the former mentor of the Japanese economy, that changed this situation. In 1974 the Americans had imposed a 10 per cent import surcharge and forced the Europeans and the Japanese to revalue their currencies. As the yen grew stronger, Japanese exports grew more expensive. Already they were reeling from the blow of President Nixon’s abandonment of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates in 1971. On top of the import surcharge came the first oil crisis in October 1973. Both of these problems came as consequences of US foreign policy, and together they served as tombstones marking the demise of the epoch of the golden age of postwar economic expansion. More than this, they marked the beginning of the end of the Third World. changing places
Washington’s abandonment of the Bretton Woods system in 1971 was in part a response to the growing US deficit that had been accumulated as the war in Vietnam progressed. Between 1967 and 1971 this deficit had expanded from $2.9 billion to $19.8 billion. President Nixon (r. 1969–74) decided that the US government could no longer afford to exchange its currency for a fixed value of gold. This is what countries like France demanded but it would have led to dollar devaluation. By abandoning the Bretton Woods system, the dollar was allowed to float, that is, rise or fall according to the demands of the market. The main consequence of a floating exchange rate was instability; exchange rates would now rise and fall on the basis of manipulation and speculation. We will see how this affected Japan in a moment. The occasion of the first oil crisis in October 1973 was the war between Israel and its Arab neighbours, Egypt and Syria. When the United States flew in military support to Israel, the members of the
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Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) cartel imposed a boycott that drove up the price of oil fourfold. In Japan, panic ensued. No industrialized state was more dependent on imported oil than Japan; nearly 75 per cent of its energy requirements were supplied by oil, none of which it produced itself. As oil prices went up, so did inflation, and with inflation went deflationary government cutbacks. Eventually the system was brought under control but by now the realization had dawned – the high-growth era was slowing down. New policies would have to be introduced by Japan’s economic managers. These policies came from the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MITI) that would direct Japanese production in a few focussed areas, autos and electronics especially. The second oil crisis, in 1979, devastated developing countries across the world and accelerated their downward slide. It had less effect on Japan than the first crisis since the government was able to more quickly control inflation. By now Japan’s rapid growth in exports, and the trade surplus that they generated, also served to cushion the shock of spiralling oil prices. Yet the success of the export drive had generated another set of problems and these had affected, especially, the United States. Unsurprisingly, by the 1980s, the success of Japan’s export drive had begun to seriously undermine the key element in America’s industrial economy – steel production. Chalmers Johnson explains: “At the outset of the Cold War, reconstructing or creating steel industries abroad was a keystone of US strategic policy, and encouraging steel imports became a tool for maintaining alliances. [US] leaders by and large ignored the resulting conflict between Cold War and domestic goals.”11 So, as a result of ignoring the domestic side of the foreign policy equation, first steel and then other sectors of US industry, such as machine tools, slowly fell behind Japan. Worse, for the United States, this happened in an epoch when world demand for steel-based heavy industrial goods was declining. Cars were but one ingredient in the shrinking pie; in the 1960s, the automobile market in Western Europe and North America had expanded at about 12 to 13 per cent each year. The twin spectres of overproduction and underconsumption were now ravaging the world of car production. By the early 1980s, expansion had slowed down to 2 to 3 per cent, and many European automakers had simply disappeared, as had the smaller American manufacturers. Punctuated by fitful remissions, the automobile situation would continue to worsen. For the North American working class this was a particular disaster as its buying power now decreased when workers lost high-paying industrial jobs as employers sought to recover profits by outsourcing
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jobs to East Asia. It is not surprising, then, that as Western workers lost jobs, and trade unions were thus weakened, inequality increased. What is more, the United States, the postwar economic colossus, was now losing its economic dominance globally. Between 1971 and 1991 the number of Japanese multinational firms in the world’s top 500 had increased from 53 to 119. In the same period US firms in the top 500 had dropped from 280 to 157. At home in the United States, unemployment and lower wages increasingly began to affect the less well-paid parts of the population. As jobs in steel disappeared, the newly unemployed turned to lower paying jobs in the service sector. This, in turn, affected the domestic market; poorer pay affected consumption. The earlier American formula for political stability based on prosperity – the Fordist formula of all-round prosperity based on mass consumption enabled by cheap resources – was now evaporating. To reiterate, the strategists who had encouraged the development of East Asian industry as a means of dampening the local interest in communism appear to have sown the dragon’s teeth. In defeating communism, they undermined the basis of America’s economic strength. By the late 1970s friction between Japan and the United States over trade had already become chronic. US trade policies sought and failed, except in the short term, to limit Japanese access to the American market. Many solutions were tried, from “balanced trade” to “managed trade” to “structural impediments,” yet few worked in the long term. From steel to cars to computer chips, goods flowed by air-freight and aboard container carriers across the Pacific as the American trade balance with Japan continued on a steady downward course. A new phenomenon now unfolded: as container dependency became more feverish, whole ports were transformed to absorb Asian exports. Two of the greatest American weapons in the economic wars that began in the era of President Richard Nixon were the overall domination of the United States in world trade and the particular advantage accorded to the dollar by virtue of its being the main, and for a quarter of a century after World War II, the only international currency – known as seigniorage. Seigniorage allowed Washington to print money at will and to force America’s trade rivals to accept the devaluation of the dollar. One French finance minister referred to this as an “exorbitant privilege,” “exorbitant” in the sense of excessively costly to America’s trade rivals.12
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Then there was what was known by the euphemism of an “exchange rate shift.” In reality, this was a kind of reverse Pearl Harbour in economic warfare. Negotiated between the Group of Five industrial nations in 1985, the devaluation resulted in the Plaza Accord, which agreed to the devaluation of the US dollar in relation to the yen. This was a turning point, at least in the short term, for the economy of the United States and a major watershed for the world economy as a whole. Suddenly there was a significant drop in the profits of Japanese automakers and the producers of electronic goods. By some estimates losses to the Japanese economy amounted to $400 billion in only a few years. Japan’s share of total world exports dropped from a peak of 10.3 per cent in 1986 to 8.5 per cent in 1990. Clearly, as a result of the Plaza Accord, the cost of production, especially wages, had to be lowered. The best way for Japanese industry to do this was to follow the American example and move offshore to lower-cost areas in East and Southeast Asia. Already by the late 1970s, Japan had become the single most important foreign investor in Southeast Asia. “So much money flowed out that Japan began to look at Southeast Asia as its own backyard, much as the US does with Latin America.”13 Initially investment flowed to South Korea, as we shall see. By the second half of the 1980s this flow shifted to China, now ripe for capital from anywhere. The move of production, trade, and finance to East Asia was not without a high cost. By the end of the century Japanese growth had been at a virtual halt for a decade, and Japanese capitalists, like the Americans before them, had sown the seeds for the growth of rivals.14 The idea was to focus domestic production in Japan ever more exclusively on the highest technology lines by relying on the country’s highly skilled but expensive labour force, while sloughing off less advanced production to East Asia. Japanese banks supplied huge loans to Japanese corporations initiating operations in East Asia, as well as to East Asian corporations, and came to constitute the largest external source of bank loans to every country in the region except for Taiwan and the Philippines. By 1996, East Asia was absorbing more than 40 per cent of Japan’s exports and about the same percentage of its foreign direct investment in manufacturing, up from about 30 and 20 per cent, respectively, six years earlier. Japan’s banks were responsible, moreover, for between 30 and 40 per cent of East Asia’s outstanding loans from the advanced capitalist economies.
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From 1973 to 1986, the Japanese growth rate was only slightly higher than that of the United States. On the basis of per capita income (but not per capita consumption), Japan had by 1988 become the world’s richest country, one that was emulated by the Asian Tigers and the countries that followed in their footsteps. The late 1980s were a time of exuberant and aggressive expansion with Japanese firms buying Hollywood film studios and prime New York real estate; it was in these years that it was claimed that the market value of the Imperial Palace Grounds in Tokyo was greater than the real estate value of the entirety of Canada. When the Ministry of Finance removed restrictions on housing loan companies, reckless lending followed. And then as Japanese authorities raised interest rates to reign in the stock market and land bubbles, a recession was triggered. Caught short, the housing loan companies now had to face the fact that they had trillions of bad debts. One of Japan’s worse postwar economic and political crises, beginning in April 1991, followed. Between 1991 and 1995, inflation-adjusted GDP growth fell to a low level of 0.6 per cent a year. Manufacturing productivity declined by 50 per cent (compared to 1985–91). In 1993 the thirty-eight-year reign of the Liberal Democratic Party was brought to an end (for a few months) by a disenchanted electorate. Two years later came what was unofficially dubbed saiyaku no toshi, “an awful year” – the worst in memory for most people. In 1997–98 Japan even experienced negative growth. Gavan McCormack, however, urges a cautious approach to any assumptions of Japanese declinism. Yet predictions of demise were greatly exaggerated … [for] Japan was fabulously wealthy, its GNP … more than 80 per cent of that of the United States, a nation nearly twice its size in per capita terms. Put another way, Japan’s GNP was more than double the combined GNP of all other Asian nations, including those of the Indian subcontinent … With fewer than 120 million people, it was on track to become the largest economy in the world, perhaps even before the end of 1995, thus matching, and exceeding, the highest ambitions, and the wildest dreams, of not only the preceding fifty years but of the century and a half since Japan began to pursue the path of Westernization and modernization. In 1995, unemployment was statistically insignificant. The nine biggest banks in the world … were all Japanese, as were the major trading companies and many of the major industrial corporations. Japanese investment funds flowed in waves that fed the growth of the region. It became the
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unquestioned chief “goose” behind which formed the ranks of the world’s dynamic economies.15 A decade before its “awful year” Japan had become the principal holder of American government debt and a key supporter of the dollar, which it used to denominate its trade with other countries, both’ honours it has been able to maintain up to 2012. This has given the Japanese useful leverage when faced with claims by American protectionists, for instance, in the automobile industry. In sum: you threaten to impose import tariffs on our Toyotas, we buy fewer of your bonds and switch our foreign exchange holdings to euros. The consequence: not only a greater trade surplus for Japan but greater indebtedness for the United States. After crisis in 2002 came a faltering but incomplete recovery. Beneath the surface a litany of problems seethed. Japan had become diplomatically isolated while moving towards closer military ties with the United States; it came to be further at odds with its East Asian neighbours in both South and North Korea and China. As a consequence of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s (r. 2001–06) insistent and tactless visits to a Shinto shrine that memoralized several of Japan’s war crim inals, Japan’s ambition to become a member of the United Nations Security Council was blocked by its neighbours, especially China. In 2006 there were anti-Japanese riots in several Chinese cities. Crowning its other woes, Japan had now become the most indebted of all developed states – “king of the world’s debtors,” in the words of Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi (r. 1998–2000) – and had one of the highest levels of its citizens living below the poverty line of the whole of the OECD. Its population was ageing and had the highest rate of suicide on earth. Polls revealed, far from any exultation that Japan had exceeded the “wildest dreams” of its planners, a deep social pessimism. There was now serious doubt that the Japanese economy, as opposed to individual firms, would be able to recover its miraculous level of growth. Commentators from the West now felt comfortable at gloating that there was really no “Japanese model” for the capitalist future, only an “American model.” Yet, by 2007, the American model itself was being abjured. And meanwhile the future was unfolding unpredictably; first, the United States, which had led the world into the meltdown that began in 2007 had to deal with the $800 billion (2006) in debt owed to the Japanese, and second, by early 2009, Japan had entered its worst economic crisis since the war.
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3 Glorious Capitalism in Communist China Chinese Socialism can best be grasped as a modern project that has sought to develop by its own unique means into its own unique type, always conscious of the other possibilities it has refused to emulate: that is, Soviet-style bureaucratic socialism (and now Russian postcommunism) as well as diverse forms of peripheral capitalism. From the beginning, the Chinese communist revolution – the successor to and radical transformer of a republican revolution – was self-consciously an alternative to colonial modernity. The post- revolutionary Maoist experiment, in turn, aspired to create an alternative to the Stalinist model, which it considered both a failure and a betrayal of the project to construct a credible socialist society. Even when the post-1978 reforms as a socialist self-adjusting movement were set back by the logic of a market transition in the late 1980s and 1990s, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) continued to search for a “socialist market” alternative to capitalist integration. Insofar as this collective effort has persisted, the chance of the Chinese model to succeed cannot be ruled out. As a country of 1.3 billion people and as an economy reaching $1.64 trillion in gross domestic product (GDP) in 2004 (the sixth largest economy in the world), and with an ambition of resisting subordination to global capitalism, China is at the epicentre of global transformation. Lin Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism Today’s “rising China,” which from the outside can seem to exude strength and confidence, inwardly lives with an unsure view of itself. People sense … that their country’s current system is grounded partly in fraud, cannot be relied upon to treat people fairly, and might not hold up. Insecurity, the new national mood, extends from laid-off migrant labourers to the men at the top of the Communist Party. The socialist slogans that the government touts are widely seen as mere panoply that covers a lawless crony capitalism in which officials themselves are primary players. This incongruity has been in place for many years and no longer fools anyone. Perry Link, “China: From Famine to Oslo,” New York Review of Books
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introduction
For most of the twentieth century it had been accepted, certainly in the West, that from c. 1500 the states of the North Atlantic littoral had gradually advanced to become the heartland of world trade and the very soul of what was to become global modernity. First the Spanish and Portuguese, then the English, Dutch, French, and later the Americans, spread their enterprise far and wide across the Atlantic and the Mediterranean and then into the Indian Ocean, the South China Sea, and the Sea of Japan. By the twentieth century, in this interpretation, “modern” meant “Western”; from the middle of the century, in fact, it meant “American.” This Atlanticist interpretation was palpably triumphalist and was the basis for the “feel good” sentiments that accompanied the teaching, especially in North America, of courses in “Western Civilization.” It served also as the basis of modernization theory. This view has now lost credibility. In its place is the argument that up to circa 1750, or even 1800, China was one of the main global centres of economic development – alongside Western Europe and Japan – as it had been from at least circa 1400, an argument summarized by Kenneth Pomerantz in the following terms: “Core regions in China and Japan circa 1750 seem to resemble the most advanced parts of Western Europe, combining sophisticated agriculture, commerce, and nonmechanized industry in similar, arguably even more fully realized, ways.”1 It seems apparent, then, that China’s economic advancement had been established before the modern period in Europe, signalled by the Renaissance and the voyages of discovery, had shaken off the somnolent darkness of the Middle Ages.2 Nor was China isolated or autarkic. During its long period of economic expansion, already begun thus by the fifteenth and lasting until the end of the eighteenth century, perhaps more than elsewhere China had benefited from the effects of global trade expansion, not least by the inflow of American, and to a lesser extent Japanese, silver. It was Japanese silver that was used to monetize the currency system in the fifteenth century. American silver, shipped from Peru and Mexico via Acapulco then across the Pacific to Manila and to China served as a further stimulus to trade. By the seventeenth century, China was importing a quarter to a third of the world’s silver. Then came the nineteenth century and full on industrialization in the West. At a time of dynastic weakness in China, the warships of the Royal Navy arrived to further the interests of British mercantilism. Seeking to find an export that might be used to pay for the silk, tea, and
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porcelain that consumers in Britain craved, British merchants had hit on opium from Bengal. Chinese officials resisted opium imports. The British declared war and used their navy, the world’s most deadly and efficient, to batter China’s protective coastal defences. The Chinese surrendered and accepted British terms; the dealers had won the first drug war in modern times. For the Chinese came the beginning of a long century punctuated by disaster. In the century after the Treaty of Nanjing (1842) that ended the Opium Wars, China suffered unprecedented devastation and humiliation. Consider the fate that followed its surrender: numerous coastal ports were occupied by foreigners (normally seen as barbarians), who were free to trade opium on their own terms. The authority of its central government, eroded by defeat, was followed by rebellions, and famine throughout the country led to warlordism and civil war replacing order and security. China was now in a shrinking mode with its Korean tributary and its Taiwanese colony confiscated and, a century after the Opium War, its northern Manchurian domains annexed. In 1911 China’s ruling oligarchy, which had obdurately, and even suicidally, blocked any kind of national renewal, was overthrown in a republican revolution. Thereafter, until 1949, China became one kind of Third World republic; a sort of Turkey at the other end of Asia, but with major differences, one of which was that China for most of its long history had been both united and economically advanced. Its unity was sustained by the world’s oldest and most extensive civil service, a body of mandarins who reproduced themselves outside of normal palace politics. In the process of China’s revolution, Confucianism, supported by the state for two millennia was totally extirpated, with communism taking its place. Civil war had begun in China in 1927. On the one side were the Nationalists (Guomindang), the republican party that was dominated by pro-Western, modernizing, businessmen, mainly from the east coast, and sustained by village autocrats, under the leadership of a general, Jiang Jieshi (1888–1976). On the other, the Communists, a mass party of peasants, workers, the urban and rural poor, and a smattering of intellectuals and even nationalist capitalists, led by Mao Zedong (1893– 1976).3 In October 1934 the Communists saved themselves from military oblivion at the hands of Jiang’s armies by means of a heroic trek into the interior of the country, known as the Long March. Thereafter, they survived, too weak to prevail against either of their enemies, the Guomindang, or the Japanese, waiting to see what lay ahead. The point
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here is that unlike that of Japan, China’s republican ruling class in the 1920s and ‘30s was weak and divided and, given the extensive influence of the Communists and the fact of Japanese aggression, lacking in the means of effectively imposing its domination by uniting the country. The Chinese Communists’ other weakness was their dependence upon Moscow where the Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin, seemed more inclined to support the Guomindang than the local comrades. A truce between these two sides had held during the Second World War when both had agreed to a common effort in what was called, not “World War II,” but the “Anti-Japanese War.” In the official estimates of the People’s Republic, thirty-five million, mostly civilians, were killed in this war. With the Japanese surrender in 1945, civil war burst into flame again. Even though the Nationalists were supported by the United States, their military leadership was so indifferent and their civil policies so unpromising that they were readily defeated by the Communists. By early 1949, on the cusp of defeat, the Nationalists’ leaders, together with a part of their armies and as much of the moveable wealth of China that they could bundle up, had retreated to Taiwan where they set up an alternative government, the existence of which soon came to be guaranteed militarily by Washington’s patrolling Seventh Fleet. Taiwan, now a protectorate, had thus become America’s second Japan; an unsinkable aircraft carrier manned by embattled Asians anchored in dangerous waters and kept buoyant by American support, economic and military. And due to the workings of the law of unintended consequences, as we shall see in Chapter 4, Taiwan became a model for capitalist development in Asia. Its resemblance to South Korea, also a fast-growth US protectorate, was more than coincidental. In the wake of the fugitive Nationalists was now a ravaged China in the hands of the Communist Party. For the first time in a century, however, it was empty of foreign gunboats and soldiers, and no longer disturbed by warlords and bandits. In October 1949, in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) was proclaimed with Mao Zedong, chairman of the Communist Party, as its effective dictator. While the new government stressed that the people of China were sovereign, it was the Party that was all-powerful and that had unrivalled control all of the organs of the state as well as a monopoly of all of China’s resources. At this point, and for the next three decades, communist regimes, Chinese and Soviet, ruled a third of the world and much of the massive
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Eurasian continent. It is hardly surprising that there was panic in Washington. In the United States, the term “the loss of China” became a familiar trope in foreign policy and journalistic circles. “To have Free China become Communist seemed a national disaster,” wrote John King Fairbanks, the dean of American historians of China.4 Stalin’s visit to Beijing in December 1949 confirmed the worst Cold War fears. Dean Rusk, long-serving US secretary of state (1961–69), was among those virtually blinded by outrage. The government of the People’s Republic, he fumed in 1951, was “a colonial Russian government. It is not the Government of China. It does not pass the first test. It is not Chinese.” Chester Bowles, an eminently liberal figure in the government of Presidents J. F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson (together r. 1961-69), warned in 1961, “We are going to have to fight the Chinese … in two, three, five, or ten years.”5 But both were, thankfully, wrong. After the Korean War the two sides settled for two decades of mutual, fist- waving, distain with the United States and its allies, effectively quarantining China by blockade. The isolation that ensued was thus hardly a matter of choice for the Chinese leadership. the chinese road to socialism
For thirty years from the October 1949 celebration of its emergence as a “People’s Republic” and the return to power of a unified and forceful government, China remained isolated and self-sufficient. It is this selfsufficiency as an agrarian country that should be stressed: controlling only 7 per cent of the world’s arable land, China was able to feed 20 per cent of the world’s population. Except, as we shall see, when it starved them. The PRC at the point of its emergence had regained all of its lost territories, except Taiwan, the Pescatores, Chinmen, Matsu, Hong Kong, and Macau.6 The foreign-controlled enclaves that had dotted its coasts and decorated some of its main inland centres had all been surrendered. In the Korean War of 1950–53, it demonstrated forcibly to an alliance of Western powers that there would be no return of foreign armies tramping into Manchuria via Korea nor, indeed, easy victories of any kind on its peripheries. The occupation of Tibet in 1952 and the Himalayan war with India a decade later confirmed that Inner Asia was another strategic frontier that Chinese armies would readily defend. The rulers of the PRC were formed into two main bodies, the Party’s Central Committee, an assembly of around 200 officials, and below
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them the 2,000 members of the Party Congress. It was from the Central Committee that the top leaders of the country were selected – those belonging to the Political Bureau (Politburo), the Politburo Standing Committee, and above them all, his authority incontestable, the general secretary of the Communist Party from 1949 until his death in 1977, Chairman Mao Zedong. The first priority of the party rulers was the creation of the Chinese version of Communist Man according to the tenets of Marxism. This required the inculcation of socialist morality in the place of what was seen to be its decadent, bourgeois, equivalent. Also following the Soviet model, a socialist command economy was established, measured in fiveyear plans. The first Five Year Plan ran from 1953–57. The most recent, the eleventh, was passed in early 2011. After 1953 the capitalist sector, the heart of which was Shanghai, was abolished almost in its entirety by a series of sweeping nationalizations. Resources were from now on – at least until the period of reform in the 1980s that we shall discuss below – allocated not on the basis of the market but on the bases of political decisions usually made centrally. Naturally, a socialist economy required a legislative program: the Agrarian Reform Law of 1950 had destroyed what was left of the landlord class and turned landless peasants into landholders if not landowners. In 1955–56 collectivization was undertaken; from this point, until the early 1980s, the Chinese peasants farmed state-owned land, not as individuals, but as members of units, collectively. The economy had thus become effectively socialized, that is, owned publicly rather than by private firms or individuals. Indeed, the peasants had become virtual serfs in a moneyless socialist economy; goods thus became the medium of exchange and scarcity was universal. Bartering, especially for the “three treasures” (medical services, transport, and food) was now ubiquitous. In the countryside taxation was paid in grain. The aim of the peasants was not to meet their own needs but to fulfil goals set by the planners in the bureaus of the central government; targets had come to replace markets. The taxes paid by peasants were used to fund the development of heavy industry; the amelioration of the lives of rural people was therefore sacrificed in the interest of urban workers. In this program of rapid industrialization financed by agriculture the Chinese were once more copying the Soviet Union where the same program had been undertaken at staggering human cost in the 1920s and ’30s.7 Throughout the 1950s, thus, the Soviet model was to the PRC the equivalent of the American model elsewhere in the world. As elsewhere in the Third World the
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program of economic development was based on a form of the later much-abused import substitution industrialization. Industrialization was imperative. The industrial economy that the Chinese leaders had inherited by 1949 was both backward and ruinous. It could not remain so if China was to avoid a return of the previous disastrous period of national helplessness and foreign invasion. The Korean War was a reminder of the perils of the Cold War future. But rapid industrialization required outside help, and for this the Chinese had turned to the Soviet Union for advisors. “Sino-Soviet friendship” was another cause of agony in Western foreign policy circles. The five-year plans specified absolutely everything that was necessary for industrial development – goals, procedures, manpower, distribution, and deadlines. The first plan, measured by the increase of steel, coal, electricity, cotton, grain, and even high school graduates, was a success. The autarchy of the backward regions was dissolved and a national market expanded on the basis of increased and a road and railway infrastructure. For their sacrifice the people of rural China received little compensation beyond what was needed to sustain them as well as a minimal improvement in public hygiene. This sacrifice was seen, by the party leaders, who did not have to make it, as an acceptable price. Perhaps they were justified; for in spite of the war in Korea and the exhausting demands of rapid industrialization, the population of China rose rapidly. The 1953 census, the first using modern methods, revealed a population of 582.6 million. By 1957, due largely to a public health revolution, it had reached 646.5 million. In a mere four years, then, China’s population had increased by 64 million, an increase larger than the total populations of any state in the Middle East or Africa or Latin America, excepting Brazil. This phenomenal growth would cause problems of its own. For Chinese economic development to have taken place there had to be investment, and, ruling out foreign sources, this had to come from the state on the basis of taxes. State investment in heavy industry, in fact, reached remarkable levels. During the First Five Year Plan, investment in heavy industry reached 38.7 per cent of total investment; during the period from 1958 to 1978 the proportion rose to 52.8 per cent. Throughout the 1950s China’s international prestige grew, especially in the Third World. The Chinese became essential players in international conferences like that at Geneva in April 1954, which was convened to discuss the future of Korea and of Indochina. Chinese participation at the Bandung Conference of 1955, where the idea of non-alignment was
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launched, was a further source of Western angst, especially the fact that the host state, Indonesia, itself boasted a huge communist party. Would the East, saved from Japan, now turn Red? Was there to be a gigantic bloc of communist countries spanning Eastern Europe, Central Asia, East Asia, and Southeast Asia? Would it serve as a magnet for the new states of the Third World? The answer was “no” in all cases and this had little to do with Western machinations. The Soviet Union and China had both enjoyed common purpose and common enemies throughout most of the 1950s. But by the end of the 1950s, after the death of the Soviet tyrant (officially “General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union”), Joseph Stalin (r. 1922–53), and the succession of Nikita Khrushchev (r. 1953–64), this came to an end, and the two communist goliaths were now, quite suddenly, bristling with hostility towards one another. The hundreds of Soviet specialists were suddenly called home while the Soviet leadership under Khrushchev were collectively branded as “revisionists” by Beijing. In the lexicon of twentieth century communism, revisionism equalled apostasy. The Sino-Soviet affair, and with it any thoughts of global communist solidarity, was thus at an end and would remain fractured until the end of the century. The Second, Communist, World had lasted as a unified bloc for barely more than a decade. The struggle between those dubbed “revisionists” and the true and unwavering Communists within China picked up where the struggle between the Chinese and the Soviet Union left off. It took the form of the Cultural Revolution that continued from inception in 1966 for a whole decade. The Cultural Revolution was the defining watershed of a half-century of Communist rule. Two years after it ended the period of reform and the slide towards capitalism began. The Cultural Revolution was, in fact, the second of the tumultuous and destructive campaigns launched by the Chinese leadership in order to both push China forward and to purge the country of dissenters. Anticipating it had been the Great Leap Forward (1958–62), an attempt at the acceleration of agricultural and industrial production that had sought to push China ahead under the banner of “more, faster, better, cheaper.” Agricultural reform led to the replacement of cooperatives and the complete abolition of private property. At first, the Great Leap Forward seemed to be succeeding and production had skyrocketed. Then it became apparent that government officials had been massaging production figures to please their masters, especially Mao Zedong. What was worse, forced appropriations of agricultural surpluses had
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left the peasants in some provinces with so little food that a man-made famine followed in which as many as forty-five million died, many more than had been killed in the Anti-Japanese War and several times more than had been either starved or shot during the Great Terror in the Soviet Union.8 The failed Great Leap Forward had barely ended when the first battles of the Cultural Revolution took place in 1966. The ostensible object of the Cultural Revolution was to weed out all those who were, by almost any criteria, soft on capitalism as an economic and political system and even on its culture – “taking the capitalist road” this was called. The Cultural Revolution paralysed the country for a decade (during which schools and universities remained closed, many students taking up the inane and anti-intellectual rhetoric of Maoist revolutionarism). It ruined tens of thousands of lives. Although at the time it was seen by a minority of faithful Chinese and Western communists as a heroic attempt to continue the original Chinese revolution, few would argue nowadays that its benefits outweighed its costs. Then came one of the great dramatic surprises of the late twentieth century, a shock as great as the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of August 1939. Barely had the torrents of rhetoric against “capitalist roaders” and their international backers begun to subside than, in February 1972, the Chinese leadership welcomed the US president, Richard Nixon (r. 1969–74), an anti-communist sans pareil, and his national security advisor, the ruthless realist, Henry Kissinger. The mouths of China-watchers now swung fully open with astonishment. Richard Nixon himself boasted that his visit to China “changed the world,” a verdict that takes no account of the changes already taking place in China in reaction to the excesses of the Cultural Revolution. Yet his apparent acceptance of the People’s Republic was a game changer; the roads from this point onward led to the ultimate coexistence in China of capitalist practice and communist rhetoric and, in the United States, to an increasing willingness, fully recognized three to four decades later, to yield a share of global economic leadership. The first courtship of what was much later to become the G2 had now been accepted; intimate relations were to follow. Thus Sino-American détente; in the official discourse of Washington, “Red China” was dropped in favour of the more respectful (and realistic) “People’s Republic of China.” It has been argued that the ultimate justification of Sino-American détente was strategic rather than economic. China wanted to offset Soviet global influence even at the cost of
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cozying up to Washington. If this is the case, the Chinese were successful. The Soviet Union was now isolated. After President Nixon’s visit, Mao Zedong’s health continued to deteriorate. He died in September 1976, aged eighty-two, preceded by Zhou Enlai, China’s premier and foreign minister, by only a few months. The question of his succession now loomed large – were the ideals of the Cultural Revolution to be upheld or was China, like the Soviet Union before it, to move westward and marketward, towards détente and capitalism? Not even the most astute China-watchers correctly predicted what was to happen next. What did happen next? In general terms, within two years of the death of Mao Zedong, China abandoned its alignment to the Third World and turned resolutely to the United States and the other developed capitalist states. In early 1979 China attacked Vietnam, a warning that Beijing did not welcome a Soviet ally – one that the Chinese themselves had once supported – on its borders. “The war was thus the true beginning of China’s entry and assimilation into the American-led economic order; from another angle, the war also demonstrates the relationship between marketization and violence. From this moment on, the old socialist stance of internationalism gradually faded from the scene, and China’s previous one-sided policy of openness was transformed into another one-sided policy of openness – that is, openness toward the West.”9 auditing chinese communism
What are we to say about the revolutionary China that died, at least according to one Chinese commentator, in 1989?10 Obviously, the Communist Party had succeeded in uniting the country and keeping attackers at bay, something that pre-revolutionary regimes had singularly failed to do. The Americans had bombed Japan and Korea, and later Vietnam and Cambodia, as well the Middle East, the Maghreb, and Afghanistan but they did not bomb China. It also succeeded in developing economically, creating an efficient industrial sector, a functioning transportation infrastructure, and an effective system of distribution. This guaranteed that China’s armed forces, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), would become the most effective fighting force in the whole of Asia and not one to be challenged. After the break with the Soviet Union this development was accomplished with little outside assistance; thus China, like the Soviet
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Union from the 1920s onward, modernized while remaining outside of the world capitalist system. This proved to many Third World leaders that the engineers who were to build the road to the future might not necessarily follow the blueprints of capitalism. Probably none of these leaders knew of the tens of millions who had been starved to death during the Great Famine of 1959–62. And the Chinese people? In most respects, China’s majority rural population lived at the numbing level of poverty that resembled peasants elsewhere in the Third World. In his sketch of the fates of the two great communist states, the Soviet Union and China, Perry Anderson comments, “Around 1980, the per capita GDP of the PRC was fourteen times lower than that of the USSR. Over 70 per cent of its labour force was engaged in agriculture, as against 14 per cent in the Soviet Union. Nearly every third Chinese could still not read or write. Its universities were a fraction of those even in India. It can safely be said that no observer, either inside or outside the country, could have predicted the reversal in fortunes.”11 Unlike peasants in Africa or in Latin America, however, the Chinese were prevented by law from moving into the cities without authorization. They were expected to hand over what they produced in return for what were essentially rations. Yet, at the same time (1979), thirty years after the People’s Republic had come into existence, even the World Bank looked on China with a barely concealed admiration. Despite a 2 per cent annual growth in population, “rapid expansion of industrial output has caused national income per person to grow fairly fast. With adjustments for international comparability, per capita GNP appears to have grown at an annual rate of 2.0–2.5% in 1957–77 and, because of a spurt in the last two years, 2.5–3.0% in 1957–79. Even the former rate is significantly above the average for other low-income developing countries (1.5% in 1960–78).”12 The World Bank report seems especially impressed with income equality and went on to note that China’s most remarkable achievement during the past three decades has been to make low-income groups far better off in terms of basic needs than their counterparts in most other poor countries. They all have work; their food supply is guaranteed through a mixture of state rationing and collective self-insurance; most of their children are not only at school, but being comparatively well-taught; and the great majority have access to basic health care and family planning
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services. Life expectancy – whose dependence on many other economic and social statistics makes it probably the best single indicator of the extent of real poverty in a country – is (at 64 years) outstandingly high for a country at China’s per capita income level.13 What the bank was observing was that between 1978 and 1984, as a consequence of a second spasm of agrarian reform, the household responsibility system propelled peasant production forward, causing agricultural output to leap up by a third and peasant incomes to rise from 30 to 44 per cent of national income. In the next chapter I will compare this with India, a model Third World democracy where there was no communist revolution, no great leap forward, no cultural revolution, no pretence at equality, and where economic growth since the 1990s has remained behind that of China. reversal of fortunes – the transition to “ market leninism ”
With the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, after a surprisingly brief period of internal political struggle, China’s new ruling class, under Deng Xiaoping (r. 1980–94), launched the country in a radically new economic direction.14 Mao himself had appointed Deng as his successor in 1975. While Deng’s collaborators were exultant, Mao’s leftist allies were appalled. Even from the early 1970s Deng had become anathema to them. They referred to him as an “arch-unrepentant capitalist roader,” and they were right. By the end of the 1980s, he had transformed China, although to what ultimate end remains beyond our view. Capitalism, now costumed as socialism with Chinese characteristics, was thus reinstated and many of the central institutions of socialism, such as the collectivization of agriculture, were abandoned. Blame for the calamitous Cultural Revolution was heaped on Mao Zedong, and the revolution itself suffered from a thorough negation. According to the Resolution on Party History, published in 1981 by the Chinese Communist Party, “The ‘cultural revolution’ … was responsible for the most severe setback and the heaviest losses suffered by the Party, the state and the people since the founding of the People’s Republic. It was initiated and led by Comrade Mao Zedong.” In 1993, a hundred years after the birth of Mao Zedong, the Maoist version of communism was as dead as the Spartan equality that it celebrated. In 1978, when Deng began his process of reform, almost all
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elements of the national economy were state-owned. Usually called state-owned enterprises (SOEs), they were at the centre of the economy and were reasonably profitable. Not insignificantly, they offered their employees security of employment as well as welfare and pension benefits. Then, to the dismay of millions, they were dissolved as a private sector slowly gathered speed. “As the market sector gained strength and significance, so the whole economy moved towards a neoliberal structure.”15 Alarm was now audible in Western business and government circles as China seemed to be, not a communist world power, but a capitalist dynamo, its motive force wound around a neoliberal armature. Popular books, authored by intellectual tourists and leaving no cliché unturned, now began to appear speculating breathlessly about the “Chinese dragon,” the creature that, once awakened, might turn on its rivals in the world marketplace and scorch them with its fiery breath. It only slowly dawned on the “reform” enthusiasts that, although ownership of the means of production was now partly capitalist, China remained a dictatorship in which power was vested in a single party, and that party was, apparently, immoveable. Their assumption that an emergent and vital bourgeoisie and perhaps a middle class, every globalist’s dream, would wrest power from the sclerotic hands of the communist ruling class and usher in democracy and a free press turned out to be an unrealized fantasy. The communist ruling class, organized as we have seen in a set of hierarchies that governed at the apex through a Central Committee, a Politburo, and a Standing Committee of the Politburo, was no more willing to commit suicide than its Western cousins. Indeed, the cousinage of the Chinese and US elites, both striving to assure their own dominance within their respective states, has been commented on by Ho-Fung Hung, who draws our attention to the symbiotic relationship between the Chinese and the American ruling classes – to the detriment of those living in rural China destined to exist in a world of “social marginalization and underconsumption.” This symbiotic relationship, suggests Ho-Fung, has given birth to a hybrid “Chinamerica.”16 We might follow the argument that capitalism had never died in China – it had been extinguished in Shanghai, its Chinese heart, in the 1950s but hung on in Hong Kong and Taiwan. At any rate, after a long winter of civil war and communist rule, it burst out into full flower, first in the Guangdong hinterland of Hong Kong and in Shanghai and its hinterland and then elsewhere. That this blooming now had official sanction became fully apparent in 1980 when Premier Zhao Ziyang
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(r. 1980–87) announced, “In economic work, we must abandon once and for all the idea of self-sufficiency which is characteristic of the national economy. All ideas and actions based on keeping our door closed to the outside world and sticking to conventions are wrong … By linking our country with the world market, expanding foreign trade, importing advanced technology, utilizing foreign capital, and entering into different forms of international economic and technological cooperation, we can use our strong points to make up for our weaknesses.”17 From this point, Chinese economic policy moved towards the Taiwan model of export-led development, joining what some saw as the flock of westward-flying geese led by Japan. That China was no mere goose content to follow the lead of Japan was soon to become apparent; its foreign trade, a mere 7 per cent of GNP in 1978, by the early 1990s had soared to 40 per cent. The change in policy towards the outside, capitalist, world was paralleled by a radical transformation within China. Previously, all land had been consigned to the state; now, private plots were allowed. By 1983, the commune system, the backbone of China’s socialized agriculture, had been dismantled. Land could now be bought and sold. Some of the peasants who owned it become landlords while others had joined the dispossessed. When restrictions on their movements were removed in the late 1990s, millions of these – 130 million, actually – flocked to the cities where they depended on a booming export economy to find employment. This huge pool of migrants, toiling long hours for almost unbelievably low wages, staffed the workshops of Pearl River Delta behind Hong Kong, which produced the cheap goods retailed in North America and elsewhere by Toys “R” Us and Walmart. According to one estimate, this region, home to just sixty million people, produced 5 per cent of the world’s manufactured goods.18 Although initially unskilled, the peasants who emigrated to the industrializing east were eager to escape from the chronic, and intentional, poverty that had been their fate in rural China. Their lack of skills was a small problem since the technology of their working places was usually quite unsophisticated. The state, that is, the Communist Party, made sure that they didn’t organize trade unions in order to improve their wages and working conditions, the latter of which were normally quite appalling. The labour cost of these repressed Chinese workers were not only dramatically less than workers in the West, they were as little as one-sixteenth the cost of labour costs in South Korea and Taiwan.
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Neoliberalism also meant that there was a decrease in the significance of state-owned industrial firms. Whereas by the 1950s the private sector had been almost extinguished, now it gradually returned. Central planning, the symbol of the socialist state was now moving away from centre stage. By 1994 the state sector produced barely over half of the output value of Chinese production, and by the early 2000s, stateowned firms accounted for only 20 per cent of China’s industrial production. On the other hand, while the number of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) fell from 77,600 to about 42,000 between 1995 and 2002, “that sector remained the chief contributor, with substantial productive gains, to the nation’s fast-growing economy.”19 Much of the foreign direct investment that at first trickled and then flooded into China came from the accounts of the Chinese diaspora that numbered in the tens of millions. Chinese businessmen in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, the Philippines, and even the United States began to move their money, especially to the coastal provinces of Fujian and Guangdong – especially the Pearl River Delta. As we have seen above, after first having moved eastwards across the Korea Strait, from mid1985 Japanese capital and manufactures began to move westwards across the South China Sea, attracted by the magnetism of low wages and high profits. By the early 1990s Japanese investment in China had skyrocketed. And American multinationals were also keen investors; the consequence of this, of course, was that these multinationals could produce goods for sale in Walmart that undercut in price the goods produced in the United States itself; US consumers benefited while US workers lost. China had become the largest recipient of foreign direct investment in the developing world. Deng had justified this on the basis of the trickle-down theory of development. He argued that the richer regions should not be held ransom by the poorer – Deng said that “some will get richer first” – and that, left to natural processes of the market, the richer, and especially the privileged “special economic zones” within them, would draw wealth which would then be diffused to the poorer. That this might produce a “Third World” of poverty in western China, an area that would provide raw materials and labour but benefit at a much lower level from economic expansion, was accepted. Already by the mid-1980s several developments that reflected the transition to capitalism had become evident. The gross value of agricultural output had increased at an annual rate of about 9 per cent since 1978. In contrast to the famine associated with the Great Leap Forward,
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the grain harvest of 1984 was the largest in Chinese history. Living standards saw a continued improvement, and rural per capita income doubled in a five-year period. The rural gains came partly because the peasants’ response to the incentive of the market had led to a rise in output. But it was also partly due to a vast urbanization of peasants, which led to a building boom in both rural and urban areas, which in turn led to improved housing, at least in some locations. It should be noted that, as in the transition to capitalism in the Soviet Union in the 1990s, the large-scale privatization of state-owned enterprises in China was catastrophic for many. “Since 1978, nearly forty thousand state-owned enterprises have been shut down. From 1996 to 2001, 53 million people working in China’s state sector lost their jobs … in the four years beginning in 1998, state-owned companies fired 21 million workers. That’s more than all the Americans who work in manufacturing” (italics in original).20 inequality and the transformation of chinese socialism
Accordingly, from the mid-1980s questions began to be asked about what was called socialist modernization. One question concerned the growing inequality that we have touched on above, while another was the corruption of the ruling elite and their accomplices. For many of China’s students and young workers these questions were linked to that of human rights. On 10 April 1989 millions of them marched into Beijing’s central Tiananmen Square and in as many as 132 cities around China to demonstrate in favour of democracy and political freedom. By 22 April there were as many as 100,000 in the square, and China’s “Democracy Movement” had been born. By early June even more flooded into the streets to demonstrate. Crisis now loomed at the highest levels. China’s leadership, divided on how to handle the crisis, decided that the burgeoning social movement threatened its very existence. Tanks and armoured vehicles were sent against the demonstrators, killing and arresting thousands of them. The “Beijing spring” had now turned into winter as a witch hunt began, seeing thousands imprisoned and the toppling of liberal figures even at the apex of power, like Zhao Ziyang, the premier who was to spend the final sixteen years of his life under house arrest. China’s democracy moment was now declared dead and the next two decades would see a flourishing capitalism guided by a communist oligarchy. The country’s
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expanding middle class, at the pinnacle of the 150 million lifted out of poverty by socialist modernization, would not protest. High rates of growth were the guarantee of stability. After the Tiananmen massacre and the ensuing purges, the program of economic liberalization paused to gather its breath and then plunged on. In December 1990 the Shanghai Stock Exchange opened, and, by the end of the next year, it had as many as 100,000 investors. In February 1992 Deng undertook a tour of southern China where he assured his listeners that making money was glorious. In the same year, the Fourteenth Party Congress approved economic and financial deregulation. This deregulation was further entrenched at the Fifteenth Party Congress in 1997. From 1992 the push towards accelerated marketization increased. In March of that year the Communist Party mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, announced that “active and prosperous financial markets will bring the country innumerable benefits,” and “a joint-stock economy can serve our socialist construction.”21 After 1993, stepped up marketization combined with the acceleration of economic growth. Yet, amid the celebration of the achievements of socialist construction, sombre notes could be heard. According to one New York Times report of 1991, China has made enormous strides in medical care in the four decades since the Communist Revolution, and in some ways the health profile of the population resembles that of a developed country more than that of a country with a per capita income of $300 per year. The World Bank lists life expectancy among Chinese at 70 years, compared with 76 in the United States and 58 in India. But there are some indications that the gains in health care have slowed in the last dozen years, at the same time that China has opened to the world and doubled its per-capita income. By some counts, for example, infant mortality has shown little improvement in recent years … The main reason for the slowdown in health-care improvements in recent years appears to be the collapse of the commune system (italics mine).22 Nearly two decades later, Susan Shirk, formerly an official of the US State Department, could testify, “China’s once-impressive public health system … has fallen apart.”23 The reforms of Deng and his successors
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had in fact represented a decisive move away from egalitarianism. Formerly, the central planning associated with the command economy had been used to resist the growth of inequality through the redistribution of resources from the richer to the poorer provinces. The “iron rice bowl” system of social welfare had now been smashed and inequality between persons, sexes, groups (including social classes and ethnic groups) and regions accelerated. By the early twenty-first century, the increasing inequality in China was attracting attention. Rising inequality has been a common feature of international economic development in the most recent decades, and China is no exception. One of the world’s most egalitarian societies in the 1970s, China in the 1980s and 1990s became one of the more unequal countries in its region and among developing countries generally … Seldom has the world witnessed so sharp and fast a rise in inequality as has occurred in China. Increasing economic and social inequality has therefore been an important subtext in the generally positive story of rapid growth accompanying economic reform and transition, and it calls into question the sustainability of that growth by raising the spectre of social instability.24 Yet while inequality increased, so, too, did the GDP; between 1988–95 it increased by 88 per cent. Up to 2003, then, (1) the Chinese nation on the whole got richer with the majority enjoying a higher standard of living: “According to the World Bank, the number of Chinese subsisting on less than $1 a day had fallen from 490 million in 1981 to 88 million in 2003. Further, in 1977 there were 250 million – or 30.7 per cent of the total rural population – who remained below China’s own subsistence line, whereas in 2003 they reduced to 50 million, of whom around 30 million were rural and 20 million emerged as the new urban poor. Overall in this period, China accounted for three-quarters of the global population lifted out of abject poverty.” (2) Social welfare worsened with the decline of basic health care and education and inequality along regional, sectoral, class, gender, ethnic, and other lines increased. The Gini coefficient of household income jumped from 0.33 in 1980 to 0.454 in 2003. So we can assume that males living in the east of China (especially the areas of Beijing, Shanghai, and the Pearl River Delta) involved as workers in manufacturing and construction got richer than women in general
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and all people living in the east of the country as well as peasants – forty million of whom had been forced off their land – and minorities in general. (3) At the pinnacle of the social pyramid, the few got much richer; some, like the seven billionaires, fabulously so. To use the favourite metaphor of development economists, then, while the rising tide of globalism did not lift all boats, it did lift the yachts.25 Thereafter, between 2003 and 2008, poverty and all forms of inequality seem to have increased, with globalization perhaps fulfilling its destiny of both moving the centres of the global economy from West to East, generally, enhancing global economic uncertainty and increasing polarization. The situation in China was thus not analogous to that in the Soviet Union in the 1990s where the transition from a statist economy to capitalism meant disaster by the simple yardstick of falling life expectancy. Let us return to the question of who got richer and who poorer. In terms of regions, the easterners within China got richer than the westerners by a long shot. Since 1989 Guangdong province in the hinterland of Hong Kong has had the highest GDP in all of China. Its capital, Guangzhou, has become one of the workshops of the world, a Manchester of contemporary China. The province of Fujian on the coast to the north came to have a per capita income ten times higher than the provinces in the western interior. Shanghai – by circa 2007 with a per capita income of $7,000+ and massive new investment – had come to look like Singapore on steroids. By comparison, Western cities like Manchester, the original workshop of the world, or Toronto, much less Detroit, looked downright dowdy or even “Third World.” In 1995 Chinese from the west of the country received an income 40 per cent lower than they would have had they lived in Guangdong, Fujian, or Shanghai. While average incomes grew by 20 per cent in the western rural areas, they grew by 71 per cent in the rural eastern areas. The urban to rural income gap has widened and so has the gap within rural China. On the whole, however, despite China’s remarkable GDP growth rate, there was “virtually no decline in the poverty rate between 1988 and 1995.”26 Within cities and towns, inequality increased and urban poverty failed to decline. This situation was worsened by government policy as regards the social safety net, ration coupons, subsidies, and housing. And, meanwhile, the gender gap increased; men got better pay than women. Who are the poor – and what does poverty actually mean? In some cases the poor are the lowest-income fraction of the population,
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comprising at least one hundred million people and including the twenty-two million urban people living on a monthly income of below $19.4 US per day.27 For them, collectively, poverty means “an increase in underweight,” i.e., that the number of them that are below average weight is increasing. Even in the early 1990s, it was noted, “Clearly poverty has remained a problem in China not just in the remote hinterland, and in some respects it might be a growing problem, emerging from the effects of marketization.”28 Not only is inequality a problem, then, but so too is actual poverty. It is the GDP growth, more than the question of inequality, that has hypnotized Western commentators and especially the prophets of globalization. The reasons for their fascination are several. On the one hand is China’s potential as a market for Western goods and investments, that is, as a source for US and European high-tech goods and, notably, capital. It is here that Wall Street especially rubbed its collective hands. On the other hand is the increasing likelihood of China’s swamping Western markets and hollowing out the West’s industrial base. Hence China’s gain would be Michigan and Ohio’s loss. Robert Brenner has pointed out yet another problem: “The same exploding imports [e.g., from China] that drove the world economy [in the 1990s] brought US trade and current account deficits to record levels, leading to the historically unprecedented vulnerability of the US economy to the flight of capital and the vulnerability of the dollar.”29 Commenting on this analysis, David Harvey presciently adds, “If the US market collapses then the economies that look to that market as a sink for their excess productive capacity will go down with it. The alacrity with which the central bankers of countries like China, Japan, and Taiwan lend to cover US deficits has a strong element of self-interest: they thereby fund the US consumerism that forms the market for their products.”30 During the period 1991–94, China’s average annual GDP growth was as high as 12.2 per cent. Even in 2006, it was 10.2, although by early 2008 there was apprehension that it might sink to below 8 per cent. Where once China was seen as a threat to the capitalist world order because of its communism, it was now increasingly cast as a hazard because of its successful capitalism. In 1990 it ranked eleventh in the world by GDP; by 2007 it was fourth. The hammerlock on power of the ruling Communist Party remains, however, thus far, at least, immoveable. Timothy Cheek puts this plainly: “The CCP-dominated government seeks to create their version of a harmonious society that will stabilize the current privileges of the Party
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elite. Similarly, the tiny but fearsomely wealthy super-elite, along with the much broader middle class, finds a confluence of interest with the Party elite in pursuing this consolidation.”31 Although exact figures are impossible to come by, in one estimate there are some seven billionaires, 300,000 millionaires as well as at least 40 million well-off. This is, it should be recalled, a small part of a total population of 1.3 billion. “Who are China’s new capitalists?” some have asked. Many are former party and government officials who have been able to translate their positions into ownership of privatized state enterprises. Others have come from outside state and party to start private ventures, beginning as small tradesmen or professionals or as peasants, like the country’s richest man, Huang Guangyu. Other functionaries behave like entrepreneurs in pursuit of profit as directors of state agencies and enterprises, but are not yet property owners in their own right. In 2002 members from the private sector were welcomed into the Communist Party, although none of these have yet advanced to significant positions within the ruling elite; a single businessman was elected as an alternate member of the CCP Central Committee. If private sector capitalists were on the rise in the Communist Party, protest was, likewise, on the rise in the countryside. In 2003 there were more than 58,000 major incidents of social unrest, an increase of 15 per cent over 2002. In 2004 there were 74,000 incidents – more than 200 protests every single day. The incidence of popular struggles in the rural areas had risen to such staggering numbers that in February 2006 the government announced a major initiative under the banner of a “new socialist countryside.” The object of the initiative was to expand health, welfare, and education for rural people. “The central government has changed direction to focus on uneven development,” explained one Chinese writer. “The economic gap is creating social conflict, and social conflict has become a more and more serious problem,” notes Giovanni Arrighi.32 The economic gap is not merely between rich and poor but between the rural and the urban populations. The gap continues to widen with 10 per cent of the population holding 45 per cent of the country’s wealth and the poorest 10 per cent holding only 1.4 per cent. The per capita income of urban residents by 2005 was 3.25 times that of rural dwellers, and the growth of their incomes at 8 to 9 per cent was almost twice that of rural incomes, at 4 to 5 per cent. From the late 1980s, then, several changes appear simultaneous in China and its neighbourhood. First, the sequestration of China from the global economic system came to an end. Secondly, within China, the
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idea of equality in poverty disappeared, to be replaced by the idea of acceptable inequality as between persons and regions. Thirdly, from around 1998, China came to replace Japan as the leading goose and economic centre of East and Southeast Asia, driving down, because of its undervalued currency and its huge appetite for trade, the growth rates of the “miracle economies” that had emerged from the 1960s. Their growth rates now dropped from 7 to 9 per cent in the mid-1980s to 4 to 6 per cent in the late 1990s. Japan’s fate seemed to be that of an ageing economy, namely slowing growth. In one analysis, in fact, Japan had lost its technological leadership, and its annual growth rate was expected to be around 1.5 per cent. Finally, it should be emphasized that the transition from socialism was no accident; it was managed by the ruling political authorities, the Chinese Communist Party, the whole way. It was they, after all, who passed the laws that undid the socialist economy and facilitated its successor. What should we expect in the future? Richard Walker and Daniel Buck provide one answer to this crucial question: “The abolition of the right to strike in the 1982 Constitution and the shooting of dissidents in 1986 and 1989 are classic examples of the brutal birth of a capitalist order … Moreover, the Chinese state’s exercise of extreme repression is unsurprising, given the CCP’s ongoing monopoly on political power – a crucial component of the PRC’s distinctive road to capitalism. An imminent leap to democracy under such circumstances is a liberal fantasy. The people of China face a long and arduous period of popular struggle if they are to tame the beast that has been unleashed.”33 China’s distinctive capitalist road, it seems by 2012, was not without potholes. The most immediate problem was the global financial crisis that had an unsettling effect on China’s export economy as the demand for the cheap goods produced by the labour-intensive factories in Guangdong and elsewhere suddenly began to dry up. After decades of having to endure choirs of praise from Western economists and businessmen delighted at the success of the transformation from socialism to capitalism, we are now stirred in our pews by such sharp, dissident analysis as that by Joshua Kurlantzick. Writing about “the wave of protest sweeping across China as the global financial crisis batters the country’s economy,” he judges that China was too reliant on foreign investment in low-cost manufacturing. The country failed to build sophisticated domestic companies that could compete with multinationals and innovate in cutting-edge
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industries like green technology or mobile communications. China’s few home-grown international brands … depend on a vast, opaque web of state subsidies and loans from state-linked banks to expand. Most Chinese firms, lacking skilled management or effective customer service, have failed to compete in developed world markets. Instead, they tend to focus their energies of Africa, South-East Asia or Central Asia, where they often do not have to compete with Western or Japanese firms. China is also finding that, though it may seem to have a bottomless pool of cheap labour, neighbouring states such as Vietnam are already undercutting it and attracting away investment – China’s own entrepreneurs are flocking to north Vietnam to build factories.34 China’s amazing GDP growth rate, which had only recently surged to 10 to 12 per cent, might soon sag, although given the unreliability of official statistics it was not clear how far – some writers suggested 8 per cent and others as low as 5 per cent. The Chinese state, like those of its Western partners, was suddenly obliged to reconsider its role in the national economy. And on the horizon are other looming problems, not the least of these being the ageing of the population. The country was ageing at a rate faster than that of any other major nation, as its median age, thirty-two years in 2004, was projected to soar to forty-four in 2040. “China will get old before it gets rich,” notes one commentator gravely.35 Perhaps even more immediately threatening is the utter ravaging of the Chinese landscape. Recall that we have noted the PRC had only 7 per cent of the world’s arable land to feed 20 per cent of its people fifty years ago. Since then, constant diminution has affected the country’s land bank; a total of 2.54 million hectares of farmland were lost in 2003 alone. “The country’s forested land had been so depleted that at a per capita 0.11 hectares, it was considered to be one of the world’s sparsest (ranking 107 out of 140).36 Desertification too was at a pace of more than 10,000 square hectares yearly, with desert covering nearly 28 per cent of the PRC territory. The level of serious air pollution was also rising … Water pollution was such that the drinking water supplies for 600 million people were substandard, and two thirds of the total number of Chinese cities were short of water. Many rivers dried up.”37 Shirk raises a final question. Crystal ball gazing, she argues that as control by China’s communist rulers slips away, perhaps due to rising mass protest, nationalism will emerge as a tool to be used by rival
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groups seeking power. This could lead to confrontation with Japan, and even worse, the United States, notably over the issue of Taiwan, which Washington is pledged to protect but Beijing regularly insists remains a part of China. Such conflict is no less likely given the Bush regime’s (2001–09) encouragement of Japanese rearmament. Writing in 2008, Shirk argues, “Japan is now well on its way to abandoning the selfimposed military limits that America encouraged after its defeat in World War II. In the next few years Japan is likely to revise its ‘no war’ constitution and come out of the closet as a formidable military power.”38 That China’s economic “miracle,” at least while it lasted, had been accompanied by a renewed military and diplomatic self-confidence, seems to be a cold comfort. By 2006 it was clear to Washington that a new threat had risen in the East; in its February 2006 statement, the Quadrennial Defence Review singled out China as having the greatest potential to present a competitive threat in Asia.39 Yet, attempts to isolate China from its neighbours – with the exception of Japan – had come to nothing. But, for China, military questions are secondary to those of the economy. When asked in 2000 what was the greatest international threat to China, Zhu Rongji, China’s premier, replied: “Problems in the US economy.”40 The title of Martin Jacques’s 2009 book, When China Rules the World, a Sinophile study of the rise of China from the depths of its defeat and disorganization to become the world’s number one export economy (a fait accompli announced in January 2010) caps what has been a decade or more of, first, complacency, and then alarm over the rise of China to dominance in Asia, the creation of a US-China bipolar world, and perhaps China’s future top position as a world power. The view of China’s ascendancy has been especially a commonplace during the Great Financial Crisis that became apparent from 2007: American establishment commentators concluded that the Great Crash of 2008 would be the catalyst for a shift of the centre of global capitalism from the US to China. The unravelling of US hegemony in East Asia and the world seemed, thus, like a done deal. Jacques calls this the changing of the guard.41 By 2009, however, the kaleidoscope had turned; America was, so it seemed, on its way back, or, at least, China may have been approaching the end of its development tether. This is, at least, the argument of Hung Ho-Fung, who has shown that the development of industrialized and prosperous urban eastern China has been purchased at the expense of the impoverishment of the west of the country, the source of its virtually
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endless supply of cheap labour. If this is halted, for whatever reason, then China’s expansion must suffer. In Hung’s view, then, the question is not whether China will supercede the United States as the world’s hegemon, but how long the compact of American finance capital and Chinese exporters can sustain the present system of mutual benefit and global dominance. The struggle continues. In 2007 Premier Wen Jiabao, who headed the “populist” faction within the government of the PRC, referred to China’s development as unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated, and unsustainable. His opponents of the “elitist” faction, representing the interests of the coastal, export-oriented bourgeoisie, seem, however, to be in control of the agenda. Meantime, what of democracy, sometimes called “the fifth modernization” and the future of Party rule? Who would be so rash as to cast a prediction for a country capable of such shifts in direction? David Harvey, for one. He notes the growing integration of the party and business elites and writes, “China … has definitely moved towards neoliberalization and the reconstitution of class power, albeit ‘with distinctly Chinese characteristics.’ The authoritarianism, the appeal to nationalism, and the revival of certain strains of imperialism suggest, however, that China may be moving, though from quite a different direction, towards a confluence with the neoconservative tide now running strongly in the US.”42 Chinamerica? More recently, Robin Porter has expressed a more cautiously optimistic view: “It is hard to see how in the longer term the continued existence of the Chinese Communist Party with its present form and function can be compatible with the new stresses and demands of China in transition. There is already nascent pressure for the further development of civil society, and with Chinese people keen and able progressively to take matters into their own hands, the political expression of this can only be a matter of time. Whether this takes the form of a demand for, or push towards, democracy on the Western model is, however, rather less clear.”43
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4 Reorientations: Colonialism, Socialism, and Capitalism in Vietnam and Indonesia Those who survived continue to live. But that will has gone, that burning will which was once Vietnam’s salvation. Where is the reward of enlightenment due to us for attaining our sacred war goals? Our history-making efforts for the great generations have been to no avail. Bao Ninh, The Sorrow of War It’s common for foreigners to assume that the reformers’ victory is inevitable; that the great march of History will take Vietnam into the promised land of free markets and, later, to political pluralism … There is nothing inevitable about what is happening in Vietnam; the outcome will be the result of day-to-day choices made by the Party and the people. Bill Hayton, Vietnam: Rising Dragon
introduction
Until the period of decolonization after the Second World War, Southeast Asia, both mainland and archipelago, comprised the following: a single independent state, Thailand (Siam), two British colonies, Malaya (which included Singapore, its capital), and Burma (before 1937, an adjunct of India, afterwards a dependency) and a couple of protectorates, British North Borneo and Sarawak, and five French jurisdictions, collectively known as Indochine. Spain had ruled the Philippines until it had been ousted by the Americans in the Spanish-American War (1898–99); thereafter this archipelagic nation became an American protectorate until 1947. The Netherlands had dominion over the sprawling Dutch East Indies archipelago, and Portugal held on to the eastern part of the tiny island of Timor. Until the First World War, Germany had owned the eastern part of New Guinea but in 1920 this was given over to the
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Australians as a prize for sacrifices on behalf of the British Empire in World War I. It was officially considered a League of Nations mandate. Like much of Asia and Africa, Southeast Asia was thus infiltrated, parcelled, tagged, bound, evaluated, and manipulated by Europeans and Americans – and very briefly by the Japanese – over several centuries, but mainly between the middle of the nineteenth and the middle of the twentieth centuries. European rule over most of mainland Southeast Asia, especially compared to Egypt, India, or Latin America, was of short duration; over archipelagic Southeast Asia it stretched over several centuries. vietnam : colonialism and nationalism
In the area of the rich Mekong Delta, which the Vietnamese called Nam Bo, the French created the colony of Cochinchine. They divided the central and northern regions of Vietnam, Trung Bo and Bac Bo, into two protectorates, Annam and Tonkin. Together with Laos and Cambodia these five jurisdictions collectively became known as Indochine and were ruled by a governor general in Hanoi. The Vietnamese emperor, Bao Dai, a puppet like many other rulers in the French and British colonial worlds, was kept in a gilded exile in Hué. French colonialism had hardly lasted for half a century before, in June 1940, France was defeated by Germany. According to the peace treaty that followed, while the Germans were to rule all of western France from Paris, central France was to remain ostensibly independent – although clearly sympathetic to the Third Reich – under a collaborationist regime headquartered in Vichy. It was from Vichy, rather than Paris, until the liberation of France in 1944 that the French ruled over the darker subjects of their tropical empire. The Vichyite regime in the tropics combined the worst vices of Nazism and French imperialism; while proclaiming its paternalism and its mission to spread civilization, it was in practice doggedly anti-democratic, complacently racist, and immovably xenophobic. Both at home and abroad, while unshakeable in their belief in France’s mission, most of its officials nurtured a loathing for their rival imperialists, the British, as well as a profound dislike for the Americans. From the fall of France in 1940, then, the Vichyites ruled Indochina, Vietnam included. In 1941, following the defeat of both the British and Dutch in Southeast Asia and obedient to the orders of Vichy, the French colonial administration accepted the regional dominance of the Japanese.
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Its officials demonstrated their willingness to requisition the labour of the Vietnamese and the raw materials of their Indochinese colony for Germany’s Asian ally. Under this new regime of wartime exactions, life for the poorest peasants became almost unbearably difficult. Yet almost all Vietnamese, from rich to poor, feared that the Europeans would be replaced by the Japanese themselves whom they knew to be more cruelly oppressive even than the French. The opposition to the Japanese was mainly carried out by the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP) at the head of their own military arm, the Vietnamese Liberation Army. The leader of the ICP was one Nguyen Ai Quoc (aka Nguyen Tat Thanh), best known as Ho Chi Minh. Ho had visited the West during World War I and was present at the creation of the French Communist Party (PCF). From France he travelled to Russia and China. As capable in Russian as he was in French and Chinese, Ho was the most worldly of all of Asia’s leaders of the first half of the twentieth century, and he ruled over the Vietnamese communists from the time he returned to Vietnam in 1940 until his death on 2 September 1969, the twenty-fourth anniversary of the restoration of Vietnamese national independence. (We must be careful, however, about what “communism” means in this context; for it certainly should not be taken to suggest that Ho Chi Minh and his comrades wanted Vietnam to be subordinated to Moscow or, later, Beijing. Above all, and even more than social revolution, they wanted national independence.) While the leading lights of Vietnamese communism were nationalists, first and foremost, they were also modernists – or at least as modern as it was possible to be in a peasant society. Communism for them was both a weapon and a theory; a weapon for liberation and a theory for modern social reconstruction. Communism in colonies like Vietnam worked effectively in providing an ideological glue that bound colonial people together, admittedly often by means of terror, and gave them a universalist cause with which to combat colonialism. This was communism’s most valuable quality in the colonial world: its capacity to unite people – militants, fence-sitters, and opportunists included – behind a disciplined cause that would help them overturn colonialism and the form of neo-feudal landlordism that colonialism often sustained, especially in southern Vietnam. But the communists did not own nationalism. An early form of Vietnamese nationalism had existed long before the idea of communism even entered the country. This focussed on resistance to foreign rule of whatever hue but especially Chinese. A powerful current in
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twentieth-century Vietnamese nationalism was a movement against landlords who, in the south of the country and especially in the Mekong Delta, were associated particularly with plantations and French rule, as well as against poverty and exploitation. As first the French and later the Americans were to learn, nationalism and socialism together produced an indomitable force. In March 1945, in the last days of their shrinking Asian empire, the Japanese carried out a coup to rid themselves altogether of the French and put Indochina directly under their own rule. This was the opportunity for the irregulars of the Vietnamese communist party, known as the Viet Minh (Viet Nam Doc Lap Dong Minh Hoi) to move against their weakened occupier and to capture one province after another. Confident that the Americans and British were sincere in their rhetoric about liberating subject peoples from Nazi and Japanese rule, on 2 September 1945, the leader of the Viet Minh, Ho Chi Minh, read out the Vietnamese “Declaration of Independence” and announced the existence of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV). In many parts of the country concerted attacks on landlords and the village officials that had supported the colonial regime followed. The landlords together with the rich and even middling peasants fled into the towns while their tenants seized their lands. This ebb and flow of land ownership, beginning in the immediate aftermath of the war and lasting for the next thirty years is what David W.P. Elliott refers to as “the beginning of one of the most sweeping socio-economic transformations in modern Vietnamese history.”1 In the autumn of 1945, supported by British imperial forces, which were mainly Indian, the French army, which was mainly Asian and African, reoccupied Indochina. The troops of the French expeditionary force included recruits from Algeria, Morocco, West Africa, and Indochina as well as legionnaires from a number of European countries, including those who had served in the Wehrmacht during World War II. The poorly armed communists were forced to negotiate a truce. To cover up their attempts to restore colonialism, the French invented the Indochinese Union. But almost immediately the truce was broken, and from November 1946 the Franco-Vietnam War began; war was now to be the fate of the Vietnamese for three decades. Meanwhile in the rural areas in which the Viet Minh had gained control, unofficial land reform, backed by and benefiting the poor peasants, went ahead. While it was being carried out, the Franco-Vietnam War ebbed and flowed. Then came the turning point when the northern French garrison at Dien Bien Phu fell on 7 May 1954. The battle of Dien Bien Phu, one
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of a succession of Cold War confrontations, led to the most spectacular military defeat endured by any colonial power in the whole of the twentieth century. Altogether, the Viet Minh captured 10,000 French and colonial troops. Six months after the fall of Dien Bien Phu, on 1 November 1954, the uprising against French rule in Algeria began. Dien Bien Phu was the Stalingrad of French imperialism – not the end but the beginning of the end. Two years later came the scuttle at Suez, after which the ultimate humiliation of defeat and withdrawal in Algeria. Essential to the victory of the Viet Minh was the support given from late 1949 by the People’s Republic. The Chinese trained Vietnamese soldiers and provided them with arms. In January 1950 first Beijing and then Moscow recognized the government of Ho Chi Minh. In June of the same year communist troops from the north invaded South Korea. For the statesmen of the West the lesson was obvious; a red tide was sweeping across Asia. The fall of Dien Bien Phu was thus one of the landmarks of the era, as the fall of the British colony of Singapore had been to the Japanese a dozen years earlier and as Suez became a couple of years later. It marked the closure of what in the West is conventionally called the First Vietnam War (1946–54). In fact, curtain time had now arrived for French colonialism in the whole of Southeast Asia; the French were now to follow the Dutch out of the region for good. Unlike the case of Africa, there would be no serious attempts to replace colonialism with neocolonialism. The destruction of the French was the opportunity for the Americans who had supported the French materially since 1950. Besides supplying the French with tanks, warplanes, weapons, and munitions under the aegis of an official Military Advisory Assistance Group (MAAG), American mercenaries flew the transport planes that parachuted supplies to the besieged garrison. The American Saigon Military Mission, the successor to the MAAG, was established in June 1954; with it Washington advanced further into the swamp of involvement that would suck the Americans ever further down. From an international perspective, the fall of Dien Bien Phu came at the end of the first round of the Cold War (ca. 1947–54) when both major antagonists had paused to survey the global situation and to sign treaties assuring one another of détente. It coincided with the major international conference at Geneva, the main object of which was to find some modus vivendi between the communist and non-communist powers in Southeast and East Asia. Korea was high on agenda; the solution to the Korean problem in 1945 had been division. This was to be
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the solution to the Vietnamese problem as well; just as Korea was divided along the 38th parallel, with the Communists being restricted to the north, Vietnam was to be temporarily divided along the 17th parallel, also with the communists to the north. Northern Vietnam was to retain the name given to it in 1945, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV), and be ruled by the communists from Hanoi, the old French administrative capital for Indochina. Communist fighters of the Viet Minh in the south were expected to migrate to the north, which many did. Christians and other anti-communists in the north were removed to the south. An International Control Commission (ICC), of which Canada was a member, was expected to supervise this transfer of populations. gieo gio gat bao (“ sow the wind , reap the whirlwind ”): the my - diem regime , 1954–1963
Southern Vietnam was now launched as the temporary Republic of Vietnam (RVN) headed by Ngo Dinn Diem and was to be ruled from the capital of the colony of Cochinchine, Saigon. Saigon, located on the Mekong River that drains much of peninsular Southeast Asia, was, as well, the commercial hub of the whole of Indochina. According to the terms of the Geneva agreement, after 300 days there were to be free elections in both halves of Vietnam, supervised by the ICC, and the country would again be united. In the RVN the landlords had attempted to repossess their lands but to limited avail; the August Revolution had proven irreversible and the old structure of rural power had been shattered for good. Many of the southern landlords anyway objected to Diem, a Catholic from central Vietnam. By means of a limited land reform program supported by the Americans, he had facilitated the continued dissolution of their estates; and in their place he encouraged a strata of rich and middle peasants who had no interest in further land reform and were antagonistic towards the communists. The poor peasants, on the other hand, pinned their hopes on the communists. By 1960 some 75 per cent of the land was still owned by 15 per cent of the population; of the 46,415 hectares distributed by the Viet Minh, only sixteen hectares were still in the hands of the original beneficiaries in 1960. For the 15 per cent, the six years from 1954 to 1960 were an idyllic period of peace and prosperity. But the promised elections were not actually held, and the proAmerican, anti-communist, and ostentatiously pious Ngo Dinh Diem, surrounded by his colourful family, held firmly to power, systematizing
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corruption in a manner familiar in client states throughout the Third World. In the villages his henchmen ruled, often settling old scores particularly against those who had supported the resistance against the French and acted against the landlords. The Western media were nonetheless enchanted by his victory and praised him fulsomely. The Saturday Evening Post claimed that he had saved his people from “the red tide of Communism in Asia,” while the CIA functionary, William Colby, claimed that Diem’s election “enhanced stability and encouraged hope for the future.” Diem continued to appoint his relatives to top posts in the government and to terrorize the opposition, communist and non-communist; this became more furious with the passing of the draconian Decree 10/59 of May 1959 that sharply escalated political repression. The writer Frances Fitzgerald was to claim that the Diem regime in the years that followed was “an indissoluble mixture of nightmare and farce.” Even the Buddhists, who comprised a huge majority of Vietnam’s population, suffered from the wrath of Diem, who destroyed any of their leaders who protested against his government’s policies. This alienated many of the Buddhist rank-and-file, most of whom were normally anti-communist. Privately, there was some scepticism about this new US puppet, but as President Johnson admitted, “Shit, man, he’s the only boy we got out there.”2 The American presence was the necessary prop for Diem’s rule. In fact, the communists referred to the regime of Diem as the “My-Diem regime” – “My” being an elided version of “American.” Americans were ubiquitous – as aid-givers, military and civil advisors, and intelligence collectors. As elsewhere there was a seamy, covert side to American activities. CIA activities, for instance, were partially financed by the opium/heroin trade that the French had rehabilitated after World War II. More importantly, from the late 1950s the Americans guided the campaigns of rural terror that sought to destroy the Viet Minh in the countryside. This campaign appeared for a time to have been largely successful. Out of 30,000 communists in the central Mekong Delta region of South Vietnam in 1954, fewer than 1,000 survived to the late 1950s. Between 1954 and 1959 the Diem government killed 68,000, arrested 466,000, and imprisoned or exiled another 400,000. But in the long term, American support was counterproductive; for it was against this background of repression that a distinctive Viet Cong movement emerged in South Vietnam, leading an insurgency against the Diem regime that began in 1960 and led to increasing US intervention between 1965 and 1979.
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Over the decades the influence of the communists had risen and fallen. With an almost Newtonian predictability, insurrections had been replaced by repression that spawned new resistance. In 1940, for instance, the Nam Ky insurrection led by the Indochinese Communist Party – whose militants were armed with bamboo spears and machetes – had been severely repressed, and the party in the south was devastated. It was resurrected to organize the August Rising of 1945, which, in turn, was suppressed by the returning colonialists. In the repression of the late 1950s the communists had reached a point of near extinction in the south – 5,000 had been arrested in a single southern province. In spite of this, another uprising followed in 1959–60. This uprising achieved its intended result of neutralizing the influence of the Saigon regime in the south and led to the formation of the National Liberation Front (NLF) in December 1960. Finally, during the Tet Offensive of early 1968, the communists again suffered crippling losses. And again they recuperated to launch the Easter Offensive of 1972 and ultimately to overthrow the Saigon-based Government of Vietnam (GVN) in 1975. By 1967 the average age of Party members was between twenty-two and twenty-five years. “The party focused on recruiting youth because of their energy, fuelled by a genuine idealism in most cases and often reinforced by ambition.”3 Although the Party had an enlightened attitude towards women, relatively few held leadership positions. While the communists in the south were barely surviving, in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) to the north, a revolution was taking place. By 1956 land reform there had reached a frenetic level. China was the DRV model, and between the DRV and China relations were as close as they ever would be. In September 1962 Beijing declared that China and Vietnam were “as close to each other as the lips to the teeth.”4 The arms that the communists used were manufactured in the Soviet Union and China and shipped via the Cambodian port of Sihanoukville to the Ho Chi Minh Trail, a series of winding roads linking north and south Vietnam and passing through Laos. development and counterinsurgency
The My-Diem regime had responded to the uprising of 1959–60 with repression in the form of counterinsurgency, a military strategy fashioned by the British in Malaya and perfected in Kenya in the 1950s. In South Vietnam, the Americans trained, armed, and directed local forces that sought to destroy the communist insurgents. Under President
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John F. Kennedy (r. 1961–63), who claimed that the 1960s would be a “development decade,” counterinsurgency was seen as an extension of “development”; where one failed, the other was prescribed. We will see the same combination later applied in Afghanistan where the lessons of Vietnam fifty years earlier had been forgotten. “Pacification” was the ultimate goal; successful pacification resulted in the elimination of communism and inevitably movement in the direction of the “free world.” Like developmentalism, counterinsurgency boasted of specific techniques and lexicons that sought to circumvent admission that pacification really meant forcible migrations and mass killings. Central to US assumptions was the decision that, since the rural communists were like fish in water, draining the water would expose them and put them in a position to be “attrited.” To “attrit” a person or a group meant to kill him or them; killing was a positive value measured, statistically, by body counts. Between December 1968 and June 1969, the US Ninth Infantry Division fighting in the Mekong Delta reported a body count of almost 11,000 enemy dead. Later it was claimed that close to half of the 11,000 were civilians. This was the time of the Phoenix Program, the means by which “accelerated pacification” would “drain the pond to catch the fish.” For the Vietnamese, one consequence of this regime of terror was further rural depopulation. Exposure of the communist “fish,” it was theorized, would follow from the establishment of strategic hamlets into which rural people would be herded and in which they would be watched over by armed guards. Outside the strategic hamlets were the killing fields, called “free fire zones” in which “search and destroy” missions would be operated by Saigon’s Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), advised by American counterinsurgency specialists, supported, now for the first time, by armoured personnel carriers, helicopters, and defoliation, first used in 1963. Yet, even when the new strategies failed, as in the battle of Ap Bac in January 1963, there was cover-up in Saigon and Washington. The communists responded to pacification and strategic hamlets with ingenuity, and by the mid-1960s, the bankruptcy of this form of developmentalism was becoming apparent. What is more, while hitherto the communists of the NLF had been appallingly armed, by 1963 larger quantities of weapons had begun to arrive in the south from the north. The weapons were accompanied by instructors, many of whom had fled north after the Geneva Accords of 1954. By 1963, as seen from the capitals of the West, the situation in Vietnam looked bleak: the communists were secure in the DRV to the
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north, while in the south the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), fighting for the My-Diem regime, had been unable to destroy the Viet Minh. Worse, due to repression and corruption, the Diem regime had become increasingly unpopular: “hearts and minds” were thus being lost to the Communists. “Perhaps Diem’s worst mistake was his inability to comprehend the needs of the peasants, who made up more than 80 per cent of the population of the RVN.”5 His second worst mistake was to alienate the Buddhists, who made up 90 per cent of the population.6 The Americans decided that Diem was unsupportable: they organized his assassination, which occurred on 1 November 1963, and the purging of his family. Diem was replaced by the generals who had destroyed him, the leaders of whom were Generals Duong Van “Big” Minh, Nguyen Van Thieu, who became president, and Nguyen Cao Ky, formerly a pilot on the French side against the Viet Minh. Ky, under suspicion from Washington for drug dealing, enjoyed the protection of the US embassy. After a year, Thieu ousted the politically incompetent Minh, and, for the remaining years of the life of the Saigon regime, he and Ky ruled as a duo, known as the “Thieu-Ky regime.” The overthrow of Diem led to a renewed offensive on the part of the NLF in 1964–65 that demonstrated that without outside aid the ARVN might soon fall apart. This fear provoked outright US military intervention and a protracted war that the communists had hoped to avoid. In the first stages of this offensive the strategic hamlets program was destroyed. It was succeeded from 1966 by a strategy of “pacification” that involved “rural development cadres” who sought to ensure that key regions of rural South Vietnam would remain secure from communist infiltration. “Welfare” now co-existed with warfare in the battle to “build democracy” in an increasingly depopulated countryside. “The Vietnamese understood the term ‘pacification’ (binh dinh) quite well, since the French had used it to describe their colonial conquest of the country.”7 the thieu regime and american defeat : 1963–1975
Forgetting the lesson of Korea (“Never fight another land war in Asia”) the Americans decided on a solution that was to haunt them for decades – to commit more troops. The American War was now launched. The civilian planners in Washington, ironically known for posterity as “the brightest and the best,” were urged by a military that still believed in the invincibility of American arms. Together they dreamed of a decisive
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victory in a relatively short period of time. In 1961 there had been 3,000 US troops in South Vietnam. Gradually this number escalated until by 1967 it reached half a million. Besides the US troops were their allies, 1.3 million South Vietnamese soldiers as well as contingents from Thailand, Taiwan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and the Philippines. Canadians stayed home and can probably thank Prime Ministers Lester B. Pearson and Pierre Trudeau. The Americans had been warned by no less a figure than Charles de Gaulle: “You will sink step by step into a bottomless military and political quagmire, no matter how much you spend in money.”8 And deeper and deeper the Americans sank, with the Johnson administration and its wise men resorting to lie after lie to deceive the American people, sacrifice more lives, and spend more money. tet
Several critical moments might be imagined in the decade after 1965. One of them was the communists’ Tet offensive launched on the night of 30–31 January 1968. Even before that, at the end of 1967, the Americans had acknowledged that the communists had become the dominant presence in the now depopulated countryside of South Vietnam. Still, rural support for the revolution remained listless: people had grown tired of ceaseless war and the endless promises of the communists that victory was just around the corner. These two factors led the strategists in Hanoi to assume that, by launching simultaneous attacks throughout the region, a general uprising could be orchestrated. Although the Tet attacks were launched with reckless confidence in victory and heroic sacrifice, the uprising did not happen. It was the communists who were now failing to learn; in May a second offensive was launched, and it, too, failed. The Americans and their ARVN allies were not destroyed. The Viet Cong suffered such devastating and irrecoverable losses that by 1970 demoralization had become endemic, a sentiment captured by Bao Ninh in his The Sorrows of War: “Victory after victory, withdrawal after withdrawal. The path of war seemed endless, desperate and leading nowhere … The soldiers waited in fear, hoping that they would not be ordered in as support forces, to hurl themselves into the arena to almost certain death.”9 To maintain even faltering pressure on the enemy, northerners had to be sent south across the 17th parallel. It seemed that the ARVN, with masses of US equipment, might actually win the war. What was not included in this calculation was the effect of Tet on American public
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opinion. Until the end of 1967 the public was evenly divided on the war, but after the offensive, which entered American living rooms by means of remarkable live television coverage, public support for the war began to drop rapidly. By the beginning of 1973 two out of three Americans disapproved of the war. On the other hand, by 1970 American official opinion had become giddy with optimism. Strategists in Washington now concluded that the war could be entrusted to the ARVN; “Vietnamization” became flavour of the year. Disengagement now seemed a safe option. Alas, this optimism was not shared by the President Lyndon B. Johnson. Overwhelmed, he did not run for office again. In the presidential elections of 1968, his Democratic successor, Hubert Humphries, was defeated by a Republican, Richard Nixon, who appointed Henry Kissinger as his National Security advisor. Kissinger was now on his way to becoming America’s most bloodied Cold War realist, involving himself in the overthrow of the neutralist Sihanouk of Cambodia in 1970, the Allende government of Chile in 1973, and the invasion of Portuguese East Timor in 1974. For his efforts in Vietnam, where he sought to ensure peace on American terms, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1970, under the newly elected President Nixon, withdrawals of the by now heavily drug-addicted US army were begun. Cambodia was bombed and invaded to assure that the supply lines to the south would be closed down. As in the case of his Republican successor, George W. Bush, Nixon hoped that there would be no defeat during his presidency. It was unthinkable, anyway, that Washington could be humbled by Hanoi. At Christmas of that year came the massive bombing of Hanoi as an attempt to soften up the northern regime in preparation for peace talks. In depopulated rural South Vietnam the communists, reinforced by troops from the North, held on. Conveniently for the re-election of Nixon, the Saigon regime reached a peak of its effectiveness in 1971. Then, in the spring of 1972, the communists launched their Easter Offensive, the main target of which was the northern provinces of South Vietnam just below the 17th parallel. The main aims were to undermine Saigon’s pacification program and revive the guerrilla movement. Given their losses, the recuperative powers of the revolutionary forces seem surprising. Once again, the balance of power shifted; this time in favour of the communists. There followed the Paris Peace Accords of January 1973, by which the United States agreed to end its combat role in Vietnam. After
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March 1973, there were no US combat troops left in Vietnam, although thousands of civilians, mainly supporting the air force of the Thieu regime, remained. Worse, for Saigon, military assistance from Washington declined. Then, in spite of professions of peace, in mid1973, came another surge. Territory held by the GVN in 1972 was now lost again. After an inconclusive year during which widespread dissatisfaction with the corruption and incompetence of the Thieu regime became even more manifest, the balance of force was now changed conclusively. In late 1974 and early 1975, quite suddenly, came a string of NLF victories and the collapse and rout of the army of the ARVN. The final chapter in the long and bitter struggle for an independent Vietnam had come. On 3 May the communist flag was hoisted over the presidential palace in Saigon – all this, and the final humiliation of American flight from the roof of the US embassy watched on television by the millions. William Duiker, formerly a Foreign Service officer stationed in Saigon, has described the end of the affair in his biography of Ho Chi Minh. On the morning of April 30, 1975, Soviet-manufactured North Vietnamese tanks rumbled through the northern suburbs of Saigon. Seated on the tanks, soldiers dressed in combat fatigues and the characteristic pith helmet with the single gold star waved the flag of the Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG). Just after noon, a row of tanks rolled slowly along Thong Nhut Avenue past the American Embassy, from the roof of which the last US marines had lifted off by helicopter only two hours before. The lead tank hesitated briefly before the wrought-iron gate in front of the presidential palace and then crashed directly through the gate and stopped on the lawn … The young tank commander entered the building … [and] … ascended to the roof of the palace where he replaced the flag of the Republic of Vietnam on the flagpole with the red and blue banner of the PRG.10 the audit of victor y
President Nixon had put an end to what has been called America’s neocolonial entanglements, and in the course of the wars that lasted for thirty years, the Vietnam of 1945 had been transformed irreversibly. Now not only was the country free of foreign domination but the social structure had been utterly overturned. “The landlordism that
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had fuelled peasant resentment and attracted a mass rural following to the revolution had nearly disappeared even by the middle of the conflict, and the land question itself had been pushed into the background by the war.”11 The cost of the war remains inestimable. The Pentagon has conceded that between 700,000 and 1,225,000 civilians were killed and wounded between 1965 and 1972 in South Vietnam alone. The US Senate estimates were 195,000 to 415,000 deaths. Dilip Hiro has claimed that “nearly 3 million Vietnamese” died. Marilyn Young has calculated that in South Vietnam where the worst of the fighting was endured, some 9,000 hamlets out of 15,000 were destroyed, along with 25 million acres of farmland and 12 million acres of forest; and 1.5 million farm animals were killed. The war had left “an estimated 200,000 prostitutes, 879,000 orphans, 181,000 disabled people, and 1 million widows.”12 Then there is the matter of the application of chemical warfare in the form of defoliants and especially Agent Orange, produced by the American chemical giant Monsanto, used initially to deprive the communists of rice and later to destroy their jungle shelter. Gabriel Kolko, who has written extensively on US foreign policy, comments: “In 1963, US experts learned that the principal defoliant, Agent Orange, might cause cancer, birth defects, and much else (a fear that was confirmed), but this knowledge failed to affect policy in any way. The Americans used defoliants for nine years, spraying 20 per cent of all of [South Vietnam’s] jungles and 36 per cent of its mangrove forests – resulting in irrevocable human and environmental damage.”13 The war in Vietnam, the longest, costliest, and most divisive war since 1865, was an utter failure on the part of the United States. Other, unexpected, consequences eventuated. The American invasion led to South Vietnam being flooded with cheap consumer goods and a tidal wave of modern equipment, both military and other, from 1954 on. Combined with the dislocation of peasant communities during the war and with the land reform introduced by the US-backed regimes, the rural class structure was utterly shattered and there was huge migration into the towns. In the place of a poor peasantry, an independent rural middle class had been born, its members resistant to any attempts by Hanoi after 1975 to carry out agricultural collectivization. The market reforms that became the hallmark of the capitalist economy after 1986 were broadly supported by the peasants, whom the revolution had released from what the communists called “feudalism,” that is, the dominance of landlords.
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postwar
After thirty years of war (1945–75) came peace and, for those revolutionaries who had survived, optimism. While the bloodbath that Western experts warned of did not take place after Saigon fell (although 100,000 people were arrested and taken off to “re-education camps”; of these, 94,000 returned, presumably rehabilitated, and the rest perished, many due to the primitive conditions of the camps) mammoth problems confronted the newly unified country. The economy of what now became the Socialist Republic of Vietnam was at a crisis point. In the north, US bombing had smashed Hanoi and shattered the port of Haiphong. A huge army had to be returned to useful peacetime activity. In the south the problems of the DRVN were even greater. The DRVN had relied almost absolutely on the US; the agricultural economy, which had not been reformed, had shrivelled due to a flood of US imports, unfarmed land was matched by unemployed farmers, the infrastructure had been battered by the war, the cities were choked with ex-soldiers, ex-bar girls, and various other employees of the invading forces. In a secret protocol signed in Paris the US had agreed to reconstruction aid. This aid never materialized; instead Vietnam became subject to a US embargo just as China was after 1949 and Cuba after 1960. Furthermore, the country had to remain on a war footing because of raids from Cambodia that killed hundreds or even thousands of Vietnamese. The SRV, in retaliation, invaded Cambodia on 25 December 1978, driving the ruling Pol Pot regime from Phnom Penh. Thereafter the Chinese supported the Pol Pot rump with military aid, at a high cost to the Vietnamese who established a puppet army of their own on Cambodian soil. In February 1979, after Deng Xiaoping had denounced the Vietnamese, the Chinese Peoples’ Liberation Army (PLA) invaded the northern provinces of the country. This was a move calculated to undermine the Soviet influence in Vietnam and to improve China’s relations with the United States that, according to Bill Hayton, had given Beijing the green light.14 Although the PLA received a mauling and retired after only sixteen days, Beijing had sent a strong signal: no more “insubordination,” no more communist solidarity. As a result, the Vietnamese were forced even further into the Soviet camp. As the life span of global communism was drawing to a close, the Soviets were subsidizing the Vietnamese economy to the tune of $2 billion a year. This could not go on. So, while, initially at least, life in Vietnam seems to have improved, by the end of the 1980s the economy was in sad shape. A turn towards the
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West, the fate of communist regimes in the Soviet Union and China, was in the cards. This turn came with the accession to power of a new generation of modernizers, led by the general secretary of the Communist Party, Nguyen Van Linh, who began his career condemning “bureaucratic centralism and subsidization.” The pivotal moment came with a resolution passed by the Politboro in May 1988 that called for a “multidirectional orientation” for the country to replace the simple reliance on the Soviet Union. At first, as in China, reform, known by the term doi moi (“renovation”), was carried out within limits and not without misgivings; the leading role of the state was not abandoned. Then, as Neil Sheehan, who reported the war in Vietnam for the New York Times, testified when he visited the country in 1989, Rationing and subsidized prices for rice and all other commodities were abolished. People were told that they would have to buy what they needed in the open market. Capitalism was legalized and private enterprise encouraged. The currency was freed to find its true value; the artificial exchange rate was ended, and the dong was permitted to float at approximately the black market rate … By the summer of 1989, prices had stabilized, stores were filled with a spectrum of goods, inflation had fallen from 1988’s 600 to 700 per cent to a projected 25 per cent … rice production was up considerably, and the country was able to export rice in quantity for the first time since the 1930s.15 With surprising speed, the “dragon model” was put in place. Although the essential social services that had impressed the World Bank – health, education, and family planning – were now neglected, most of the economy remained in the hands of state-owned enterprises. In fact, although the foreign-owned sector is a highly visible part of the economy, in 2005 the state owned 122 of the 200 biggest firms in Vietnam. Economic growth reached 8–9 per cent in the early 1990s, slowed down after the Asian crisis of 1997, and then increased again, averaging 7.5 per cent between 1991 and 2008. This growth was rooted in an export strategy dependent on coal, oil, textiles, footwear, coffee, rice, and seafood. The per capita income in 1997 was $350 per annum; by 2001 it had reached $2,130, still below Malaysia ($3,640) and Indonesia ($2,940) but above Thailand ($1,970). In 2007, the year the country joined the World Trade Organization, Vietnam ranked
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109th on the UN’s Human Development Index, which measures health, longevity, education, and living standards. This ranking was well below Malaysia (at 58th) but above India (at 127th). Bill Hayton offers a summary account: It’s a common assumption among many observers of Vietnam that the coming of capitalism will create a new force in society, a new middle class with sources of income independent of the Communist Party and able to stand up and defend itself. This may come in time, but it seems a long way off. For the moment getting better off requires loyalty to the Party. The well connected are exploiting their connections to become rich, and the rich are exploiting their money to buy protection from the state. The result is widening inequality between rich and poor … Poor families have benefited less from falls in infant mortality and malnutrition than better-off ones. A third of poor children are underweight, compared to 5 per cent of better-off ones. Bear in mind that in Vietnam the “poverty line” is around $15 per month. Anyone earning over that is not classified as “poor.” A further problem is that most wealth in Vietnam is hidden from view, usually because it has been obtained through shadowy means. The gap between the top and bottom of the pile is wide and getting wider.16 In spite of the political monopoly of the Communist Party, Vietnam is still held up as a shining example of economic liberalization. Perhaps this is a misinterpretation of the role of the party; for as Hayton has argued: “[An] explanation for Vietnam’s success is that reform was begun to protect the state sector, not to dismantle it; … the state’s involvement has remained consistently high throughout the reform; and … until recently, World Bank policy advice has been ignored, except where it fitted with the Communist Party’s own priorities.”17 indonesia : colonialism and nationalism
If colonialism in Southeast Asia was normally of short duration, Dutch colonialism is the exception. For some of the nearly 20,000 islands of the East Indies, Dutch rule had lasted a remarkable three and a half centuries – from 1600 to 1942. Then, with astonishing suddenness, it was terminated. Between March and May 1942, the Japanese occupied
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Dutch India, as it was called, rounding up the Dutch colonialists and imprisoning nearly 10,000 of them. The few lucky escapees bolted to Australia. The East Indies now became Japanese, to be exploited mainly for the oil reserves of Borneo and Sumatra. Unlike the case of Vietnam, where during the war nationalists kept their distance from the collaborating French, many of the Netherlands’ former subjects signed up with the Japanese. For these, as it turned out unexpectedly, service to the Japanese cause was a useful apprenticeship. The Japanese, unsurprisingly, claimed that their empire wasn’t a real empire in the European sense but rather a Co-Prosperity Sphere, that is, a kind of commonwealth. They claimed that the Indonesians should enrol themselves in the broad anti-imperial movement that sought to liberate Asia from Europeans. “Asia for the Asians” was thus the Japanese slogan, a kind of antidote to the European claim of a “civilizing mission,” which meant, in reality, “Asia for the Europeans.” The Japanese slogan had the effect of encouraging faith in the idea of an Indonesia for Indonesians. Even in adversity, the Dutch had few doubts about the future of their Indies. On the first anniversary of Pearl Harbour, their Queen, Wilhelmina, who was in exile in Ottawa, gave a speech reminding her listeners of the indivisibility of the kingdom. She offered practically nothing to the colony’s nationalist leaders other than the promise of consultation. In Indonesia itself her assertion was met with scorn by the nationalists who had formed the Partai Nasional Indonesia (PNI) in 1927. The slogan of the PNI was forthright: “Free Indonesia.” By 1930 the party had already enrolled 100,000 members. Unlike the Dutch, who had attempted to elaborate a racial-legal system that privileged the few and excluded the many, the nationalists sought to establish an independent state that was all-inclusive. At the youth congress of 1928 the central principle of “one country, one people, one language” had been established. Achmed Sukarno (1901–1970), the leader of the nationalists, in common with nationalists elsewhere, had spent years in and out of colonial prisons. On 17 August 1945, two days after the Japanese surrender, the Indonesian nationalists struck, declaring that a new, independent country had been born; Sukarno was proclaimed president and Muhammad Hatta, his vice-president. Sovereignty was, however, short-lived. By November the Dutch were back, seeking to take over from the interim occupation of the British, who had undertaken the task of reinstating Dutch colonialism. As with the French in Vietnam, their claim was
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e nergetically disputed. For four years, the Dutch colonial army of some 90,000 fought against the nationalist irregulars while the population of the country suffered, particularly as a result of the Dutch blockade. On the sidelines the Americans and the Soviets watched, both, for different reasons, supporting the nationalists. By March 1949 following a truce brokered by the newly created United Nations, the nationalists emerged victorious. Clearly, the tide of world affairs had turned against colonialism, and Indonesian independence became a reality: in December the United States of Indonesia (Republik Indonesia Serikat) was born. The whole of Asia, apart from crumbs like Portuguese Timor, Hong Kong, and Macao, had by this time either become independent – like India, Ceylon, and Burma – or was on the cusp of freedom from colonialism. It was also listing dangerously leftward; for alongside communist China and socialist India was an emergent Indonesia that was ruled by a left-wing nationalist coalition, a major element in whose support was the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI). independence : the sukarno era , 1949–1966
Blindsided by the successes of nationalism, the Dutch had tried to bind the Indonesian islands to the Netherlands by means of a NetherlandsIndonesian Union. This was an imitation of the British Commonwealth and the French Union, and, like both of these, it was a failure. Worse followed. In 1957 Dutch firms in Indonesia were nationalized and, in 1963, West Irian, the western half of the huge and resource-rich island of New Guinea, which the Dutch had tried to hold on to, was given to the Indonesians by the United Nations. Achmed Sukarno, who ruled Indonesia as president from 1949 until he was overthrown in 1966, was simultaneously a nationalist, an anticapitalist, an authoritarian populist, and a spiritual obscurantist. A secularist, like the rulers of China, India, Egypt, and, up to a certain point, those of Pakistan, he was resolutely determined to keep Indonesia in civilian hands. To this end, at the political level, he contrived a blend of nationalism, religiosity, authoritarianism, socialism, and Third Worldism that he called “Guided Democracy” – an eccentric mix since most regimes recognized religion and communism as being antithetical. Then there was his national moral philosophy called Pancasila, a weak metaphysical tea that stressed rectitude and struggle in the direction of spiritual revolution.
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The Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) was the oldest in Asia and the largest outside the Soviet-Chinese bloc. At its peak it had three million members and included civic officials and even a few ministers in the government. Adhering to the revolutionary tenets of Leninism and imagining that world revolution was nigh, the PKI had launched an abortive uprising known as the Maidun rebellion in 1948. From 1963 its leaders had organized land seizures and were demanding the right to arm their followers. They were obviously pleased with Sukarno’s claim, made in 1964, that the Americans in Vietnam were “imperialists,” but otherwise their insurrectionary instincts were sublimated; no historical evidence has ever materialized indicating that the leaders of the PKI planned to overthrow Sukarno and establish a communist regime. Nevertheless, some of the army leaders and the Americans in the embassy in Jakarta certainly suspected this. Sukarno himself was cautious; the kind of communist takeover that had been witnessed elsewhere was far from his mind. When the Chinese foreign minister, Zhou En-lai, visited Indonesia in 1964 to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Bandung Agreement, he tempted Sukarno with a shipment of arms. But Sukarno temporized, inviting his generals to study the question and never followed through with the proposal. Military Coup In the decades of Sukarno’s rule a couple of major problems had risen to an unsettling prominence. First of all, there was the economy; Sukarno had neither an overall plan nor the technocrats to implement one. Indonesia was thus more like Cambodia, or even one of the ex-colonies in Africa, than India or China where high levels of education had survived from pre-colonial times to produce, under colonialism, a layer of competent modernist functionaries and technicians. The Dutch had walked away from Indonesia as their neighbours, the Belgians, had from the Congo, leaving only the merest educated stub. Sukarno had no talent as a planner and hardly any sense of the gravity of the problems from which the Indonesian people were suffering. He thus was unable to formulate any kind of strategy to assure that agricultural productivity – essentially the production of rice – met the needs of the people. So when agricultural productivity decreased and the transport infrastructure crumbled, Sukarno turned increasingly to borrowing. This was at best an interim solution; by 1964 deprivation had continued to rise, reaching levels not felt since the time of Japanese rule. By 1965 foreign debt had
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reached $2.1 billion, an amount greater than could even be serviced by export earnings; and by the end of 1965, inflation was so high that prices doubled every few weeks. People were encouraged to turn away from rice, which was needed for export, and to eat corn. By the mid-1960s the Indonesians were among the least well-fed people in Asia. While many of the junior officers of the Indonesian military were communists, some of the senior officers were no longer sympathetic with the vague goals of the president, especially his foreign policy of “steering to the left,” that is, towards China. They were alarmed at the growing influence of the PKI. Prominent among these was MajorGeneral Suharto (1921–2008), an opportunist and self-server of no avowed political convictions, although, obviously, he loathed and, presumably, feared, the communists. In common with other army officers, Suharto had become involved in smuggling. Even before the coup of September 1965, largely due to the entrepreneurial activities of a number of the senior officers, the army was becoming an economic force to be reckoned with. Sukarno used the PKI as a counterweight to it. On the night of 30 September 1965, Suharto became involved in, and perhaps even initiated, a coup d’état. To this day, the events of what became a thoroughgoing counter-revolution are opaque, in part because it became a coup against the PKI in which the whole of the leadership of the party and hundreds of thousands of its followers, including those in the army and air force, were slaughtered. The estimates are imprecise. Max Lane sets the figure at between two hundred thousand and two million. On the island of Bali alone between December 1965 and early 1966 “an estimated 80,000 people, roughly 5 per cent of the population were killed.”18 Many of these were not communists at all but rather the victims of revenge on the part of landlords who sought to destroy peasant organizations set up by the PKI. Chinese were also killed for racist reasons, and women were raped and slaughtered because they had belonged to women’s organizations affiliated with the PKI. In the months that followed, in the climate of government- controlled anticommunist hysteria, about a million and a half people were imprisoned, many of whom perished from inadequate diet and torture. The role of the United States in the coup of 30 September – 1 October 1965 is as controversial as the coup itself. Yet even the CIA seemed shocked by the extent of the bloodbath. In a report on the killings, it explained, perhaps disingenuously, “In terms of the numbers killed, the anti-PKI massacres in Indonesia rank as one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century, along with the Soviet purges of the 1930s, the
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Nazi mass murders during the Second World War, and the Maoist bloodbath of the early 1950s.”19 The PKI did not survive the purge that followed the coup; by the end of 1965, the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and China had been extinguished, and in March 1966 Sukarno was forced at gunpoint to hand over all government functions. His cabinet was dismissed and fifteen members were arrested. A New Order was now installed. suharto and
“ developmentalism ”: 1966–1995
However incompetent as an economic manager, Sukarno had attempted to steer Indonesia between the rock of the West and the hard places of Moscow and Beijing. He had undertaken reforms that aimed at greater equality between rich and poor and between women and men. Suharto made no such attempt, turning Indonesian foreign policy sharply to follow a resolutely pro-Western course and creating a radically unequal society. The spirit of Bandung was thus dead. The embassies of Beijing and Moscow were closed. Washington and London rejoiced. Equality, too, was finished; engorgement by the few and the subordination of women were now policy. The fact of a military dictatorship with hundreds of thousands of communists in prison stimulated foreign investment, and for three decades the economy of Indonesia grew. President Nixon noted his satisfaction: Indonesia, he said, was “the greatest prize in the Southeast Asia area.”20 With the economy wide open to foreign investment and ownership, by 1977 the Americans and the Japanese had sunk $8 billion in the country. Military involvement in the economy, which had begun before the coup, spread furiously with officers being given important state companies and plantations to manage (and plunder) as well as becoming involved in outright ownership of hotels, service stations, mills, and transportation. ”Different parts of the armed forces as well as individual officers began to operate businesses as if they were private capitalists … During the first fifteen years of the counter-revolution, businesses owned by different sections of the armed forces formed a majority of the major new corporations. Later, this started to be overtaken by huge conglomerates owned by the families of a small number of generals. Foremost among these was the huge business empire of the Suharto family.”21
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By 1982 the generals managed 47 per cent of civil government departments; even before then, in 1977, the US Securities and Exchange Commission had complained about the level of corruption. But overall, Washington was happy: “The US government had closely followed the events of 1965, and approved of the abolition of communism, by whatever means. While being careful that there should be no direct involvement in the massacres, the US made it clear that it was ‘generally sympathetic with and admiring of what [the] Army [was] doing.’”22 The ideology of the new regime, replacing the wooliness of Pancasila, was “developmentalism.” By parliamentary decree, in 1983 President Suharto was named “Father of Development.” As we have seen, “development” had been formulated in the West as a universal panacea for the Third World and was, by some, at least, considered a third way beyond communism and Western capitalism. Developmentalism in Indonesia was guided not by the idealism of the non-aligned but by technocrats, especially economists, trained in the West and associated with the University of Indonesia. These were known as the “Berkeley mafia”; they and their teachers came from a variety of Western universities, all of which, of course, taught orthodox, neoclassical, economics. In common with the Stalinists who managed the Soviet economy in the 1930s and the Maoists who managed that of China in the 1950s, few of these were concerned with human rights and all were obsessed with growth. Their program, however, was nothing new; they aimed at exiting the dead-end of Sukarno’s socialism by promoting state-led capitalist development with particular emphasis on national industries. These industries were to be both heavy, that is, producing industrial goods, and light, turning out products for the consumer markets. Central to this industrial growth, and thus central to Indonesia’s future, was oil. Oil and Economy Although the Anglo-Dutch Shell and the American Caltex oil companies had long been established in Indonesia, the oil industry had hardly taken off by the time that Suharto seized power. In 1967, his first year as president, he established the national oil company, Pertamina. Six years later, following the first Arab-Israeli war, came the first oil embargo. Prices spiked. Then came the Iranian Revolution, and they climbed even further. By the early 1980s, with oil prices still buoyant, energy sales as a proportion of total export earnings had reached 70 per cent and were still floating upwards.
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As the sea of oil on which Indonesia floated came bubbling into the economy and the pockets of Indonesia’s oleocrats, it benefited almost the whole of the population, lifting, especially, the boats and the fortunes of the growing middle class, many of whose members found employment in a swollen state bureaucracy that grew from 608,000 in 1963 to over 3 million by 1986. Still, Indonesia’s middle class was smaller than that of anywhere in capitalist East or Southeast Asia. Oil not only enriched the dominant class and sustained the middle class but it provided a lubricant that reduced the friction between the rivals within the ruling group. For the top ranks of Indonesia’s officer elite, there was always a ministry or a directorship to be managed, irrespective of qualifications or competency. There is no better an icon of petroleum-fuelled rapacity than the first head of Pertamina, Suharto’s close crony, General Ibnu Sutowo. It was Sutowo who had developed intimate and mutually enriching relations with the Japanese businessmen who needed all the oil that the Indonesians could pump in order to feed their insatiable industrial demands. By the time he had forced to step down as manager of Pertamina in 1976, General Sutowo, through imprudent borrowings, spendings, and pilferings, had plunged the company into over $2 billion in debt. But, being an intimate of President Suharto, he was allowed to retire in peace to manage his commercial empire of thirty-seven companies, which included ownership of the Jakarta Hilton. One of Sutowo’s protégés was B.J. Habibie, who was to succeed Suharto as president. Yet we should not be distracted by the mammoth gains accumulated by the few. As we have noted, the many also benefited from the oil boom; in the period 1970–80 per capita income almost doubled. Unlike Nigeria, for example, the Indonesian state invested extensively in agriculture and rural development in the form of irrigation, fertilizer subsidies, and rural public works. It was this investment that partly accounted for the rise in living standards and longevity of the majority of the people who lived in rural areas. At the same time Indonesia expanded its infrastructure of basic health and education facilities, giving the country one of the highest levels of primary school enrolment rates in the world (93 per cent). In some respects Indonesia resembled such oil-rich developmental states such as those in the Middle East where oil revenues poured into the pockets of those who stood nearest the apex of power but also providentially sprayed those standing near them. It did not resemble the oil producers of Africa, where gouts of oil wealth squirted directly from
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the hands of the military leaders and the bureaucrats and middle men around them directly into the banks of Switzerland. Windfall profits from oil stimulated the wider economy that was protected from foreign imports and heavily subsidized. In the industrial sector, development projects like steel and aluminium mills soaked up the profits from oil and expanded Indonesia’s working class. The oil bonanza continued until the 1980s when oil revenues began to decline sharply and many large-scale projects had to be scrapped. Subsidies for food and fuel were also cut back. Up until this time Indonesia’s economic diversification had become modestly successful but was still heavily dependent on natural resources (oil, timber) and cheap labour, some of it being semi-skilled and employed in the textile industry. Two developments kept up the steady supply of this cheap labour. First, efficiencies introduced in connection to the Green Revolution reduced the number of agriculture jobs, especially women’s jobs; the unemployed therefore sought unskilled work in industry. Second was the failure of education. Despite primary school levels of education being provided to all, Indonesia lagged so far behind other Asian states that few people were being equipped for anything other than basic labour. Basic manufacturing, therefore, was sustained on the backs of literate but poorly educated young women who, as elsewhere in the world, were disciplined through fear of losing their jobs. By the 1990s, manufactured exports had risen so steeply that there was talk of Indonesia no longer being dependent upon hydrocarbon exports. Most of these exports were of the low-skill, labour-intensive, light industrial kind that were produced right across the region from Sri Lanka to South Korea: textiles, garments, footwear, furniture, toys, and sporting goods. The basis of the economy had now shifted away from oil: “The share of non-oil exports as a percentage of total exports increased from 31 per cent to 50 per cent in the period 1978– 87. By 1990, it was reported in the Far Eastern Economic Review, there was no longer talk about Indonesia’s reliance on hydrocarbon exports.”23 Between 1990 and 1995 Indonesia became one of the world’s fastest growing economies, its GDP increasing at an annual rate of 7.6 per cent. Most of both Indonesia’s raw materials and finished goods were supplied to Japan. Indeed, Japan has come to play an increasing role in the Indonesian economy. By the 1980s Japan had become simultaneously the main market for Indonesia’s oil and natural gas and the chief source of investment.
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Fear of China’s rising military and economic power, in part a legacy of Sukarno’s sympathy for the People’s Republic, was the corollary of the Suharto regime’s tight embrace of Japan. Relations between Indonesia and China, which remained rocky through the 1970s and 1980s, were nonetheless normalized in 1989. This underlines the continuities that run through Indonesia’s post-war history, one of which is the utter decline of Western influence in the region. The decline in Western influence became more emphatic with Indonesia’s joining the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the regional common market organization that became the focus of the country’s foreign policy, too. typhoons
Crisis hit in 1997. Even before this there had been subterranean rumblings. As early as 1976 a formal protest against corruption and the degradation of civil life had been sent to the president. Mass arrests of those suspected of being associated with the protestors followed. One of their number, Sawito Kartowibowo, deemed to be at the head of a conspiracy, was put on trial. On the dock, he arraigned the government: “It is not unusual to hear of police who are thieves, soldiers who pillage and murder the people, watchmen who always sleep, cashiers who embezzle money, customs officers who smuggle, teachers who become prostitutes, leaders who are corrupt; of … the poor being asked for donations, the rich being given credit, the destitute being preyed on … bosses overeating while subordinates go hungry, and leaders getting fatter while the people grow more afraid.”24 Sawito was sentenced to eight years and served five, but the middle class had been mildly politicized and Suharto had been warned. After Sawito came others, like the notables who organized the “Petition of 50” in the mid-1980s. Politicians, soldiers, and the like had become concerned about the corruption and degradation of the state. Suharto heard them and so did many young men, some who were students in Muslim schools and some simply unemployed. In September 1984 between eighteen and sixty-three Muslim students were shot by soldiers while protesting. Protests continued, but for Suharto and his gang it was business as usual. In the absence of an effective politics of opposition, a politicized and populist Islam, such as that which was growing in the Maghreb and the Middle East, was becoming the vehicle for protest by both the disgruntled and the disinherited. But Indonesian Islam differed from that
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of the Middle East in that Indonesians were, on the whole, more inclined to secular nationalism. “The independence struggle had imbued many Indonesians with nationalist, democratic, and socialist ideals that were decidedly secular. Secular nationalism was particularly influential among Muslim members of the largest ethnic group, the Javanese.”25 By destroying the communists, however, the Indonesian generals had cleared the ground for an even more tenacious plant – political Islam. Aware of the rising role of militant Islam, in January 1985, General Suharto named “terrorism” as the enemy of the state. A few weeks later a bomb seriously damaged Indonesia’s major Buddhist shrine, and in the years that followed there were sporadic clashes between the armed forces and Muslim groups. By the 1980s it was clear that Islam was an issue that needed to be spoken to by power. Concessions would have to be made to keep Muslims sweet. Girls in Muslim schools were now allowed to wear the hijab, and Islamic education crept into secular schools. Islamic courts were given extended powers. In 1990 an attempt was made to co-opt the Muslim middle class behind the regime, and a new umbrella organization (initialled ICMI) was formed. For certain Muslims, the doors of opportunity now swung open more widely. The next year the general, for the first time in his life, went on a pilgrimage to Mecca. He came back with a new name: Hajj Muhammed Suharto.26 This was the year that Soviet communism in Europe collapsed, weakened by the resistance of mujahidun with missiles in Afghanistan. It was also a time during which democratic revivals were toppling dictatorial regimes from South Korea to Latin America. If Suharto and company were alarmed by this or by the flight from the Philippines in 1986 of the nearby engrossing dictator, Fernando Marcos, they remained complacent. Not so for the international press. Perhaps more than any other event, the televised massacre of pro-independence activists by the Indonesian army in Dili on the formerly Portuguese colony on East Timor on 12 November 1991, concentrated their attention. family property
Still, time seemed to be on the side of Suharto; Indonesia was, above all, stable and profitable. When the Dutch protested to the international consortium that had delivered aid to Indonesia for twenty-five years, they were rebuffed, and in 1992 aid, under the aegis of the World Bank, was increased. In March 1993 Suharto was elected for his sixth term of office. His daughter became the vice-chair of the party and his son
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became treasurer. Earlier in the year, President Bill Clinton (r. 1993– 2001) had taken office in Washington. Human rights activists, trade unionists, and others found him to be more concerned with human rights issues than his predecessor George H.W. Bush. In February 1994 Toronto’s Globe and Mail featured a story headlined “Economic Miracle Bears Fruit – For the Few.” Canada’s national newspaper noted that “rampant nepotism, cronyism and lavish displays of luxury are fuelling bitterness in Indonesia about President Suharto and his family.” A few months later the Guardian (London) commented that indulgent Western attitudes may change now that Suharto can no longer guarantee “stability.”27 Since an overhaul of the whole system was unthinkable, sacrifice was necessary. A leading Chinese businessman in Indonesia, Eddy Tansil, was the scapegoat. He was given a seventeen-year prison sentence over a fraudulent $430 million letter of credit he had obtained from a state bank. But this was not enough: the Berlin-based Transparency International, a corruption watchdog, elected Indonesia as the world’s most corrupt country. In a feature on the Suharto family in November 1994, the Observer of London estimated the fortune of Suharto père at £10 billion. The paper reported that his eldest daughter, Tutut, vice-president of the ruling party, had managed to combine money-making and jet-setting with a love of politics. Her principal company, Citra Lomtoro Gung, managed a system of deeply unpopular toll roads. Her other interests ranged through wood pulping, educational TV, radio, publishing, and pharmaceuticals. Suharto’s sons, Sigit and Tommy, were partners in the manufacturing and trading Humpuss Group. Bambang, yet another son, had become the most successful of all family members in business: “His firm Nusantara owns hotels, coal mines, property, paper mills. He made a fortune out of a monopoly on the import of plastics; he got a monopoly of the trade in oranges in Kalimantan but lost money when his excessive greed caused farmers to revolt.” The Observer was perhaps too gallant to mention Suharto’s wife, Tien, a queenly figure with a taste for diamonds, referred to by some as “Tien Per Cent.” In an article in Time magazine in May 1999, it was claimed that the Suharto family controlled $15 billion.28 earthquake
The end of the Cold War (c. 1990) marked a global climate change in politics. Neoliberalism and globalism, thriving since the 1980s, could
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live with dictators but they no longer could excuse them so readily. Moving with the increased democratization of the times, in the late 1980s the Indonesian government proclaimed a new doctrine: openness. Laws were changed to make foreign capitalists feel better; they could buy land, open businesses, and even compete with the firms owned by Suharto’s cronies. Money flowed into the country; the economy climbed to an annual growth rate of 7 per cent per annum. There was talk of a new Asian Tiger. The World Bank, which had loaned the regime about $25 billion during Suharto’s three decades of rule, treated the country as a poster child of economic development. In Indonesia, claimed a World Bank report of 1994, “the poor have been doing well, and far better than in most other developing countries.”29 Indeed, in 1970 Indonesia’s per capita income had been two-thirds of that of India and Nigeria; by 1996 it had risen to $1,090, four and a half times that of Nigeria and triple that of India. The middle class filled the new malls while their children sought rapture in global consumer culture. And after the long night of censorship, the media became relatively freer. People in Indonesia joined the jet stream of news that was flowing around the world and thus, for instance, became aware of the massacre in Dili. They now began to believe anything, so long as the government didn’t claim that it was true. Among the other news they heard was that Dr B.J. Habibie, brilliant, pious, a protégé of Ibnu Sutowo (of Pertamina fame) and a likely figure to succeed Suharto, had brought an entire navy from the former East Germany for $482 million without consulting his admirals and generals and at great profit to himself. Its refurbishment, done, unsurprisingly, by one of Habibie’s own firms, was to cost more than its original purchase price. But the publication of news of this was going too far; the journals that reported it were closed down. They shifted to the Internet. There was also talk of Suharto’s replacement. The Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI), which had existed in the late 1960s and had been associated with Sukarno’s children, promoted his eldest daughter, Megawati Sukarnoputri, who became an activist on the part of the poor and dispossessed. Students, the urban middle class, and peasants, desperate for a leader who could show them the way out of the New Order swamp, all flocked around her. The supporters of Suharto attempted to repress support for Megawati through violence, intimidation, and victimization, but these strategies backfired and drove even more into opposition. Then, in 1997, came the East Asian economic crisis. No country was worse affected by it than Indonesia where the rupiah crashed to one
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fifth of its earlier value against the US dollar. Social disorder increased. Businesses that had borrowed dollars – like Suharto’s crony, the banker and noodlemaker, Liem Sioe Liong, who was in debt to the tune of $600 million – were in crisis. The IMF was called in. Its misjudgements led to a worsening of the crisis. The New Order boom of the 1990s had been based on huge inflow of foreign capital. Now capital fled and crisis arrived. As industries collapsed, unemployment rose and the numbers of poor multiplied. On the whole, however, the Suharto clique suffered little financially. Its members did lose out in terms of credibility and control, for as the crisis deepened, those demanding reform, in spite of intimidation, were emboldened. Students moved to the political foreground. At the private Trisakri University in Jakarta, troops shot and killed four of them in a demonstration. The middle class was outraged and Suharto became unnerved. He resigned on 21 May 1998, handing power to the faithful Habibie, purchaser of the ruinous East German navy. Ravaged by declining health, by 1999 Suharto, ill, weak, and sallow, had become a shadow of his former self. Even though it was widely felt that Habibie’s reign was temporary, in a desperate attempt to please the IMF and to distance himself from the regime of his patron, the new president undertook a number of surprising reforms. Still, he was unable to wash away the stains of the regime under which he had previously served. When presidential elections took place in 1999 the blind Muslim reformer Abdurrahman Wahid, who had been a regular critic of the regime since the 1980s, became head of state. Wahid stumbled on chaotically until mid-2001, by which time an alliance of the military and more militant Muslims forced him out of office. He was replaced by Megawati Sukarnoputri, his vice-president. In the years that followed there rose an ever-enveloping cloud of crisis accompanied by the global background music of reform: “democratization,” “good governance,” “transparency,” “inclusion,” “empowerment,” “leadership teams,” and so on. At the level of society, life became more difficult, and social tensions accordingly grew. The simultaneous growth of Christian churches, attracting especially the rural Chinese in the outer islands (Ambon and Central Sulawesi), and of political Islam led to greater conflicts, in the form, for instance, of church burnings. In October 1996 nine Christian churches were burned in east Java. Even at the top, extremist solutions were mooted. General Prabowo, Suharto’s son-in-law, who believed in a “Jewish-JesuitAmerican-Chinese” plot to topple Suharto, publicly charged his fellow
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Muslims “to drive all the Chinese out of the country even if that sets back the economy twenty or thirty years.”30 The Chinese Indonesians in the urban areas, where most of them lived, became once more targets of violence. The greatest violence was reserved for East Timor, which had become independent after a referendum in August 1999. Here the army refused to give up and carried on a murderous rearguard action by means of local militias that resembled the contras of Central America. After some 2,000 people had been killed, Habibie called in a multinational UN force of peacekeepers commanded by an Australian. As they withdrew under pressure, members of the Indonesian military destroyed as much of the infrastructure of Timor as they could. In the urban centres there was an efflorescence of political Islam and an increase in bombings. Muslim preachers, inspired by the phenomenon that had grown right across Eurasia, demanded less religious tolerance and a stricter and narrower interpretation of the central texts of Islam. I shall discuss the growth of religious Islam further in Chapter 6. In Indonesia, political Islam was given a wide berth by politicians who sought the votes of Muslims. On 12 October 2002, in imitation of the events of 11 September 2001 in New York and Washington, terrorists bombed the tourist Mecca of Bali, killing over 200, mainly Westerners. Other bombings took place in Jakarta in 2003 and 2004. The organizer of most of these outrages seemed to be Abu Bakar Basyir, a radical Muslim preacher, who was inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt. Baysir maintained that Islam was under threat from a Westernbased international conspiracy. The prosecution of the followers of Basyir led to a generalized disenchantment with radical Islam but also to a yearning for more and better security, which only the army, hitherto the backbone of the new order, could provide. The situation here was more than superficially similar to that in Algeria where military terror was the price of keeping radical Muslims out of power. Megawati proved to be an uninspired choice. Lacking in political acumen and indecisive, she failed to prevent the growth of regional movements of autonomy (especially in East Timor, Irian Jaya, and Aceh) that increased localized corruption and even the break-up of the country. Disillusioned with her rule, in September 2004 Indonesians voted into power the retired General Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who surprisingly managed to stabilize the economy and assure the security of democracy. Running again for election in 2009, Yudhoyono won an easy victory. Meanwhile, the fortunes of the rich minority were
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undisturbed while Indonesia’s environment continued to be degraded through the unrestricted felling of the country’s forests. At other levels, too, there were magnifying problems. The heyday of economic development, the boom years from 1990 to 1995 when Indonesia’s economy grew at the remarkable rate of 7.6 per cent, had passed. Not only did Indonesia seem unlikely to recover the rate of growth that it had enjoyed in the 1980s, but, roughly from the moment that Habibie replaced Suharto in 1998, it seemed headed for disaster. Environmentally, too, Indonesia was being consumed by the fires of avarice. At the moment of its independence, the country had an estimated 152 million hectares of tropical forest. By 1989 this had fallen by nearly 30 per cent to 109 million hectares, not all of which were in good condition. The laissez-faire exploitation of the forests had been one of the centrepieces of the New Order and the source of immense profits for several of the Suharto gang. By 1980 Indonesia had become the world’s largest exporter of hardwoods. Vast areas of Kalimantan were devastated and the people that inhabited them driven out. In the press in 1981 it was reported that there broke out in Kalimantan the worst forest fire in recorded human history. In 1997–98 a new factor emerged – the clearing of forests for palm oil plantations, a lucrative area of profit urged upon foreign investors by the International Monetary Fund. Even wider areas were ablaze. In July 1998 the haze caused by the burning of forests of Indonesia reached Malaysia and Singapore and Prime Minister Mahathir of Malaysia declared a state of emergency. What was the cause of this environmental holocaust? Logging companies from neighbours such as Malaysia were given huge concessions to turn the giant rainforests into pulp for Japanese paper mills. While world environmental attention turned to areas such as Brazil, Indonesia’s forests disappeared, their removal concealed by official statistics that showed that they were being managed efficiently. The real situation was only revealed when forest fires began during annual dry seasons in the areas that had been stripped. Since much of the forest area of Kalimantan is on peat soil, once started the fires took months to be extinguished. As areas larger than the whole of Tasmania burned, huge palls of smoke engulfed neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia. Some of those fires were encouraged by Suharto cronies who set up palm plantations in the cleared areas, to provide cooking oil for international fast food chains.31
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When China decided to ban logging in the late 1990s in order to control flooding, the Chinese building industry turned to Indonesia for timber. “The result was predictable,” writes the environmentalist Peter Dauvergne. “Indonesia saw deforestation rates soar: from 2000 to 2005, the outer islands experienced the world’s highest rates of forest loss.”32 Then there was oil, or rather the diminishing supplies of oil. In 2004 the New York Times reported that Indonesia’s oil wells were drying up faster than new wells were being tapped. The largest and most accessible oil deposits having been tapped, the government was having difficulties, under the terms that it offered, to find oil companies willing to explore remote sites. The following year there was speculation that Indonesia might become a net importer of oil. The $4 billion that the IMF reported as having been misappropriated from Pertamina by Suharto and company in 1997–98 alone meanwhile had presumably been squandered. On 9 July 2007 Indonesian state prosecutors filed a $1.5 billion civil suit against Suharto. The Economist reported: They allege that for 20 years the retired general, who was toppled in 1998 after 32 years in power, forced state banks and others to plough hundreds of millions of dollars into the Supersemar Foundation. Much of this money, rather than being used for promised social work, was allegedly siphoned off to companies run by members of the first family and their cronies … On July 10th the attorney-general’s office announced it would soon prosecute [Suharto’s son] Tommy for allegedly embezzling money from the nation’s clove management agency. Lawsuits against at least six other Suharto foundations are being considered.33 Suharto died of multiple organ failure on Sunday, 27 January 2007. A decade earlier he had been named the most powerful man in Asia. His legacy is varied. Some may remember him as the architect of modern Indonesia, others as up there with Mobutu of Zaire in the global kleptocrat league. Whatever the verdict, his fortunes, his friends, and his foreign allies were all bound together by a single export commodity – oil. As the value and availability of oil diminished, the regime that had been bound together by its exploitation came apart.
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5 Tigers: Export-Led Industrialization in South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore Growth first started accelerating in East Asia, in Japan’s former colonies of Korea and Taiwan. Then it spread to Southeast Asia … It rose steadily in the city-states of Singapore and Hong Kong … China and India awoke, having once been great in their own right … [N]ot for a long time to come will an empire reign the way the United States reigned after World War II. Alice Amsden, The Rise of the Rest
introduction
The Asian Tigers – South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore – also known as the East Asian newly industrialized economies (NIEs) and “late industrializers,” comprise an archipelago of physically small countries that developed beyond all expectation in just a few decades.1 From 1960 to 1970 the GDP growth of Singapore was 8.8 per cent, of Hong Kong 10 per cent, of Taiwan 9.2 per cent; from 1975 to 1984 growth in these archipelagic states held firm at 8.5, 10, and 9.2 per cent respectively. Thereafter, while their expansion continued at a remarkable rate, they were joined by other Southeast Asian states like Malaysia and Thailand, all of which benefited from investment from Japan. Finally, from the late 1980s, China rose – the Goliath of all of the NIEs. What explains the boom of these miniature Japans? In the conventional argument, having first tried import substitution industrialization (ISI) in the footsteps of Latin America,2 from the mid-1960s and with the encouragement of the IMF, the Tigers switched development strategies and modelled themselves on Japan’s export-led industrialization (ELI). Accelerated takeoff followed almost immediately, leaving behind states, like those in Latin America, which did not learn the ELI lesson.
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The story as told by Alice Amsden, the chronicler of South Korea’s industrialization is, however, different. She writes that although writers in the West have tended to disparage ISI, the NIEs actually stuck with it and from it moved on to ELI slowly and deliberately. “Despite all the bad press, even the most efficient mature high-tech industries now practice import substitution. In Asia, assemblers of calculators, computers, and cell phones first buy hundreds of their parts and components from overseas, mostly from Japan. Then step-by-step they selectively importsubstitute them. Protection never enters, but its equivalent does. The government provides assemblers with science parks, semiconductor design services, spillovers from government labs, cheap credit, and joint R&D … The whole idea that export-led growth and import substitution were at odds proved to be mismeasured and false.”3 Here, as elsewhere, comparisons are invidious; for the Asian states in question and those of Latin America have so little in common historically that the similarities are like those of apples and oranges. Let us consider this fruit salad of Third World polities. For starters, as we shall see in Chapter 10, in the immediate post-World War II years, Argentina, untouched by fighting with its economy stimulated by a remarkable demand for its exports, had the fastest growth rate in the world. In the aftermath of the war, Hong Kong and Singapore, on the other side of the world, had economies that were quite ravaged, having barely recovered from Japan’s wartime exactions. Korea’s moment of agony was to come and was to last from 1950 to 1953 when it was devastated by the Korean War. Taiwan from 1945 was an occupied state, overrun by a nationalist Chinese army from the mainland, which, as we shall see, may have been more brutal than the Japanese forces that had retreated. All of the Tigers were, thus, victims of imperialism, British, Japanese, and even mainland Chinese, and of the war between rival imperial powers that included the Americans. All of them, except Singapore, were, at most, shards, broken off from prewar independent states; none were historical states in themselves. During the Cold War, especially in the 1950s, South Korea and Taiwan had been turned into client regimes of American military power, like Japan, aircraft carriers that were anchored off the shores of the People’s Republic. It would simplistic, however, to see them simply as victims of US imperialism; for, like Japan and the Europe of the Marshall Plan, they benefited to a remarkable degree from US economic charity. Thus, in an attempt to win hearts and minds, the Americans opened their doors and their markets to their products, showing an almost oblivious attitude to any possibility of commercial
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competition. Here was neocolonial modernism at its most benign. With American encouragement, and looking with apprehension over their shoulders at China, both South Korea and Japan went so far as to follow Japan’s agrarian reforms, remarkable undertakings in societies in which peasants comprised the largest element in the population. Even by the 1960s all of the Tigers had begun to excite notice from developmentalists. The pattern of their development, it became obvious, was roughly this: one after another, thanks to heavy government intervention including subventions and protectionism, all of the Tigers organized their economies to target the markets of the West, especially that of the United States.4 “Organized” is the key word here; for among the Tigers one planning decree followed another, Soviet-style. These plans were typically called “the Second National Development Plan,” or, more simply “the Third Plan,” the latter being invoked by Taiwan between 1961 and 1964 where it was emphasized that heavy industry held the key to industrialization. Often, as in the case of the South Korean textile industry, governments legislated protectionism to keep out rivals from more advanced economies. In Taiwan access to the highly protected domestic market for indigenous firms was conditional upon a certain share of production being sold overseas. At the same time, the governments acted to support local infant industries. Amsden relates the following anecdote regarding the genesis of Korean shipbuilding: “In the late 1960s, the United States opposed Korean’s investment in a shipyard on the grounds that it was too big … The shipyard is now the largest and possibly most efficient in the world, having diversified into steel structures, overhead cranes, and offshore platforms to absorb capacity. Ship designs were procured by Korea’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, who drove around Scotland buying the designs of bankrupted Scottish shipbuilders.”5 In South Korea a kind of economic Darwinism prevailed; if firms failed, government subventions were cut and they perished. Still, neither low wages nor imitation were sufficient in themselves to raise productivity in fields where innovation was the standard. Research and constant improvement was thus essential. In South Korea, for instance, the government established a textile department in Seoul National University. Laissez-faire capitalism was thus honoured, if at all, in the breach: development was never left to market forces. The state was ubiquitous; “the Plan” was its hallmark. America’s wars in Korea and Vietnam, however appallingly brutal they were for their victims, had the subsidiary effect of stimulating regional
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local economies. The Korean War that we shall look at below was a tonic to Japan’s takeoff and also gave work to the South Korean firm Hyundai. The war in Vietnam in the 1970s, which may have derailed American politics and any hope for the creation of a more just society, benefited the economies of all of the Tigers. By the time of the fall of Saigon in 1975 these were advancing at rapid speed thanks to draconian domestic policies that repressed labour costs by restricting trade unions – as well as virtually all forms of political organization. Simultaneously, they suppressed domestic demand and ignored human rights while encouraging accumulation on the part of the small class of national capitalists, imitators of the Japanese zaibatsu, and all kept the value of their currencies low while benefiting from the global free trade regime that kept rich foreign markets more or less open. The same practices did not apply to their own markets, however, for these were kept sealed and neither labour markets, nor currency valuation, nor trade, was left unmonitored. In South Korea, for instance, the shadow of the noose hung over those who might have considered the illegal transfer overseas of funds, that is, “capital flight.” In the 1960s even the smoking of foreign cigarettes was regarded as unpatriotic. What comes around goes around. After a couple of decades of rapid growth, by the late 1980s South Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong all had labour costs that were far too high for basic manufacturing, especially as compared to China. An increase in the value of their currencies made matters worse. Investment had now shifted to the less-developed but promising labour markets of coastal China and Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia. (Later, in its endless search for cheap labour, industry was to shift from China’s coast to its interior.) Jobs in industry were succeeded by jobs in the service sector. Thus, although as early as the 1930s Hong Kong had been one of China’s leading industrial centres, by the mid-1990s the service sector provided 75 per cent of Hong Kong’s GDP and 70 per cent of its employment. Our story might end in the 1990s, by which time all of the Tigers had developed economically. Collectively, they had come to enjoy highly efficient education systems as well as superior standards of healthcare; and they had passed from brutal authoritarianism to some form of democracy. The pioneering historian of US “declinism,” Paul Kennedy, writing in the late 1980s, a time of soaring Japanese success, was forcibly struck by the dramatic changes to the health of the citizens of two of the Tigers, Taiwan and South Korea: “A Taiwanese child born in 1988 could expect to live seventy-four years, only a year less than an
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American or a West German, and fifteen years longer than a Taiwanese born in 1952; a South Korean born in 1988 could expect seventy years on earth, up from fifty-eight in 1965. In 1988 the Taiwanese took in 50 per cent more calories each day than they had done thirtyfive years earlier. They had two hundred times as many televisions, telephones and cars per household; in [South] Korea the rise in the possession of these goods was even higher.”6 True, like Japan, the Tigers were democracies only in a particular sense, and so it obviously cannot be argued that democracy or economic and political “freedom” by Western European or North American standards was essential to economic growth. But we must ask: How important was democracy, given the other gains? For those interested in the industrial development of other parts of Asia, it remained to be seen how far, and under what circumstances, it would be possible to duplicate the example of the Tigers. Certainly, it had seemed unlikely at first that the economic development of small island states might be reproduced in the case of giants such as China, India, or even Indonesia. But, as it turned out, certain nasty surprises were in store for the naysayers and the complacent commentators in the West. In the chapter that follows I shall give pride of place to South Korea, the state that became, after Japan, the industrial giant of East Asia. We will see that South Korea’s fortunes were closely tied to those of Japan, and for that reason its road to development has remained exceptional, if not actually inimitable. korea : occupation , division , destruction , rehabilitation
Historically, Korea had more than a little in common with the early civilizations of China and even Persia and nothing in common with such parvenu states as Taiwan (est. 1948) and Singapore (est. 1965). Korean civilization emerged during the Bronze Age (c. 700 BCE) when it was strongly influenced by China, especially in the north. In the Three Kingdoms Period (300–668 CE) the first consolidated Korean states rose, and between 668–900 CE, one of them, Silla, became dominant. The state religion of Silla was Buddhism, its capital was modelled on the Chinese capital of Changan, and its scholars were educated along Confucian lines. The Confucian-trained scholars of the court soon regarded the Buddhist monks as rivals and worked to destroy them,
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although the state ideology did not become officially Confucian until 1392. The dynasty that brought about this change was the Choson (Yi) dynasty that ruled from 1392 to 1910. Even by the exalted standards of Chinese history, such longevity is awesome. Korea, thus, was a unified state throughout most of the Modern period of history. We should recall this when we speak of the divided Korea that has existed since 1945. The Choson state was remarkable in several respects, one of which was that fact of its division into several tiers – at the top, a strata of land-owning Confucian scholar-officials, the yangban, brahmins who did no physical work. Immediately below them was a broad layer of commoners who were the main producers and, finally, below them a strata of slaves, comprising up to a third of the population between the twelfth and seventeenth centuries. In Seoul, the political and cultural capital of the kingdom, the proportion of slaves was as high as 60 per cent. “No society can be understood without knowing where it came from,” writes the pre-eminent Western historian of Korea, Bruce Cumings. “Modern Korea emerged from one of the most class-divided and stratified societies on the face of the earth, almost castelike in its hereditary hierarchy.”7 In the nineteenth century, Korea was known to the West as the Hermit Kingdom, mainly on account of its truancy in being penetrated by the economic forces of globalization. In 1876, however, the Japanese forced Korea to open its borders, and in 1910, five years after defeating the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War, the Japanese invaded Korea outright and turned it into a colony. Japanese colonialism, over the next couple of decades, spread to Manchuria and from there into north China. As we have seen, for the first decades of the twentieth century, it was Japan rather than any Western country that attempted to establish itself as the leading regional power in East Asia. For Japan, the takeover of Korea was a compelling proposition. Cultural factors aside, Korea had a strong central government, a peasantry disciplined by centuries of servitude, and a reasonably well- educated and competent bureaucracy. It also had considerable resources, including water power, iron, and coal in the north, and agriculture in the south. All of these factors Japan had harnessed to its strategy of industrial growth so that by the 1930s Japanese investment had turned Korea into an industrialized colony with a partly commercialized agricultural economy focussed on rice production. The social consequences of the colonial development of Korea by the Japanese were profound; high taxes, high rents, and increasing Japanese
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ownership drove the Koreans off their own land and often out of their own country to seek work in Manchuria or Japan, where they were cruelly treated by the racist Japanese. Other Koreans were absorbed in industry, mines, or railway work. As a consequence, although in 1910 Korea had practically no working class, by 1941 it had nearly 1.3 million industrial workers. Over half of industry and some 86 per cent of heavy industry was located in the north of the country. Simultaneous with the birth of a working class, there developed a Korean colonial elite that sought personal gain by associating with the Japanese. This stratum, common in every colony, provided much of the leadership, and especially the military leadership, for the Republic of South Korea (ROK) after World War II. Park Chung Hee, the strongman president of South Korea between 1961–79, who Time magazine dubbed extravagantly, “an Asian version of Hitler,” was among them. Most Koreans were from the beginning hostile to Japanese imperialism. The first Korean nationalist parties appeared in the 1920s, at the same time that they emerged in Vietnam. The nationalists were often connected to Christian churches that had been spawned by foreign, especially American, missionaries. The Korean Communist party was formed in 1925 and was supported by communists in China and the Soviet Union. Over the course of the 1930s, the Japanese killed as many as 200,000 Koreans who, in one way or another, attempted to resist Japanese rule. During World War II, as in Vietnam, the screws were tightened down in the interests of the Japanese Co-Prosperity Sphere. Higher taxes and price inflation were used as fuel for the Japanese war economy. By 1942 the tax rate was three times higher than in 1936, and the Japanese were conscripting hundreds of thousands of Korean men and women for military, industrial, and other purposes. The other purposes included sexual services to which between 50,000 and 200,000 Asian and mostly Korean women were forcibly recruited. In an attempt to stifle the inevitable rising tide of nationalism, the Japanese interdicted the use of the Korean language, even compelling the Koreans to change their family names into Japanese. These repressive measures backfired, fanning rather than quenching the nationalist flames. the birth of two koreas
Japan collapsed as an imperial power in August 1945. From September the country was under US occupation. The effects of this occupation
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were several: one of them was that Japan became the US headquarters for an informal sphere that spread over East and Southeast Asia. America had replaced both Britain and Japan as the dominant European power in East Asia. With the collapse of the Japanese empire a power vacuum was created in Korea. Into it from the north rushed the Korean communists, thousands of whom had fought alongside the Chinese in Manchuria and China. On 6 September 1945, four days after the Declaration of Inde pendence had been promulgated in Hanoi, the Korean communists, backed by Soviet forces that had crossed the border on 9 August, announced in Seoul the formation of the Korean Democratic People’s Republic (KdPR). Meanwhile, on the other side of the Pacific Ocean, different plans were being formulated. At several stages during World War Two, including at the Cairo Conference in 1943, the Koreans had been referred to by the Americans as a people enslaved by Japanese imperialism. There had been loose talk about liberation. Now the tune changed and the argument was made that Korea might be made into a trusteeship administered by the victors of World War II. When the Japanese surrendered, a revised version of this plan was offered by Washington to Moscow; the Americans and the Russians should divide the peninsula between them, it was proposed. The 38th parallel was to be the dividing line. North Korea was to fall within the Soviet sphere, and South Korea was to become an American political satellite. Both the Soviet Union and the United States wanted to deny as much territory as possible to their rivals and to secure their own strategic interests. American troops arrived in South Korea on 8 September, two days after the announcement of the formation of the KdPR. They imposed the United States Army Military Government (USAMG) in the southern half of the country. This was in effect an occupation authority that was based on the implicit assumption that the Koreans in their zone were a defeated enemy. Under the USAMG, Syngman Rhee was installed as de facto head of state, supported by the KDP. Rhee was a Protestant pastor and a long-time resident and lobbyist in the United States. He had much in common with other exiles who had spent their lives in America to be returned home to run their countries as reliable proconsuls lacking any local bases of power. Reactionary, manipulative, duplicitous, and, necessarily, ardently pro-American, Rhee formed the Korean Democratic Party (KDP), around which rallied the forces of conservatism, including many of the large landowners and both industrial capitalists and officials who had profited from, and served, the Japanese occupation. He
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banned the representatives of the People’s Committees that sought to root out the old order and create a new progressive state, claiming that they were part of a “communist front.” This was the mirror opposite of what was happening both in North Korea and Eastern Europe where pro-Soviet regimes, with the Red Army behind them, were being implanted. In fact, it was a phenomenon evident right across the war-torn world, with the Americans and their allies assuring that rightists would be installed in countries under their control and the Soviets and their allies assuring that communists would be installed in theirs. Rhee and the Americans effectively declared war on the Korean nationalist left, attacking trade unions while stemming the tide of land reform. Although his victory was not easy, it was complete. By 1949 Rhee’s supporters had effective control over the Republic of Korea (ROK) Army, the police, and the judiciary while the jails were full of nationalists and reformers of every stripe; political violence, carried out by the army and right-wing youth squads had executed 100,000 by 1950. With the formation of the Republic of Korea in July 1948 the United States had withdrawn its occupation forces. Its advisors were nonetheless active in the counterinsurgency campaign – protest being stimulated by huge inequalities between a tiny elite of the rich and the masses of the poor – that Rhee unleashed against the people of Cheju island and the mainland opposite. The campaign was marked by “nauseating atrocities … Americans organized and equipped the southern counterinsurgent forces, gave them their best intelligence materials, planned their actions, and often commanded them directly.”8 In North Korea the Soviets had been the occupation force. Upon receiving the Japanese surrender they handed government over to Kim Il-Sung,9 a communist guerrilla leader who had spent the war alongside the Chinese Communists, fighting the Japanese in Manchuria. Surrounding him were other guerrilla veterans of the war against the Japanese in occupied Manchuria.10 Within a few months of liberation, a number of reforms had been enacted, including land redistribution, industrial nationalization, and formal equality for women. At the political level, a powerful mass party enrolling hundreds of thousands of Koreans and a rudimentary army had emerged. In 1948 the Korean Democratic People’s Republic (kdpr) and the Korean People’s Army (KPA) were formed; thousands of the KPA’s soldiers had fought as guerrillas on the side of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA), especially in Manchuria. It was these former guerrillas who became the rulers of the DPRK for the second half of the twentieth century.
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the korean war, 1950–1953
“The Korean War was a civil war that foreign intervention turned into a surrogate world war.”11 Its origins are still debated. But what remains clear is this: it was, as Gavan McCormack stresses, a civil war, not an invasion by one country of another. Thus it should be seen in the same light as the American Civil War, not the Japanese invasion of Korea or the German invasion of France or Poland. Still the question remains: did the South provoke the North? Did Kim Il-Sung think he could get away with a blitzkreig? Where were Moscow and Beijing in all this? Was this another example of the spread of global communism at the expense of freedom-loving peoples? From 25 June 1950 the flow of events was as follows: the KPA, equipped with Soviet tanks, crossed the 38th parallel. In the weeks that followed it drove the ROK army tumbling southwards, practically into the sea. It captured some 95 per cent of the national territory of Korea and 98 per cent of the population. This provoked an international crisis, all the more grave since the existence of the neighbouring People’s Republic of China had been declared in October 1949. The United States called an emergency meeting of the UN. A vote was taken and it was decided to form a UN army under US command. The UN secretary general, Trygve Lie, lobbied for an American resolution denouncing the attack by North Korea and threatening to have member states of the UN respond forcefully. The Soviet Union might have blocked the resolution through its veto in the Security Council but it was boycotting the UN. Thus was formed a UN army, comprising forces from a rainbow of nations including Canada, Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand, and Turkey. Never again, until the invasion of Afghanistan, would the US receive such broad support for its overseas expeditions. The US and South Korean armies blocked the North Korean advance at Pusan on the southern coast of Korea. In a brilliant amphibious landing in Inchon on the west coast, the US army drove the KPA army back across the 38th parallel and then northwards right up the length of the peninsula to the Yalu River, the frontier of Korea and China. Under the aegis of the UN, civilians suspected of communist leanings were slaughtered in the thousands by the advancing army of South Korea.12 Then, in November 1950, the Chinese, threatened by the presence of the US on one of its most vulnerable borders, intervened in a surprise assault and drove the UN forces back southwards across the 38th parallel. The war now raked up and down the peninsula until an armistice was agreed upon in July 1953. Korea, North and South, had meanwhile been torn
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apart; three million North Koreans and a million South Koreans were killed and half that many were missing. As well, between 500,000 and a million Chinese soldiers were killed in pushing the NATO forces out of the north. In the process of the American carpet-bombing of the peninsula, over 300,000 homes had been destroyed. According to the US air force general, Curtis LeMay, “We burned down every … town in North Korea and South Korea.”13 The infrastructure of the industrialized north had been pulverized – dams, factories, bridges were all rubble. In fact, the scale of urban destruction exceeded that of Germany and Japan in World War II. In the view of Cumings, this counts as genocide. The big winners of the war were the Japanese economy and Syngman Rhee. Japan became a forward military base and arsenal for operations in Korea with American military spending and stockpiling meaning orders for machinery, steel, chemical products, and armaments. The surviving farmers of South Korea were inadvertent beneficiaries; during the occupation of the south the KPA had carried out land reform. This was not undone. This reform had two main effects; first, it redirected capital away from the land towards industry, and, second, it uprooted the conservative landlord class and created greater income equality. Rhee’s hold on power was consolidated. capitalist development of the republic of korea
Rhee’s regime thus became a dictatorship oiled by US military aid. Yet, corruption became the undoing of Rhee himself, and he was forced to resign in April 1960. His whole clan was thrown out of power and influence – like the Diem clan in South Vietnam in 1963 and the Marcos clan in the Philippines in 1986. After a brief, faltering attempt on the part of oppositional parties to form a government, in May 1961 a military dictatorship under General Park Chung Hee was installed and lasted until 1979. Park was the founder of the Third Republic, the state that emerged from the developmental wilderness to become one of Asia’s industrial giants. In some respects, in fact, his rule seems quite revolutionary; for he swept away the entirety of Rhee’s corrupt machinery, threatening, dismissing, and even jailing thousands of those accused of incompetence and the “illicit accumulation of wealth” and built the modern state. In the 1960s South Korea’s per capita GDP matched that of Ghana; both stood at $230. By the early 1990s, South Korea was ten to twelve times more prosperous. Historical differences aside, the analogies with Latin
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America here are also tempting because what stands out is how closely South Korea fits into the Latin American Cold War timetable, with nearly three decades of military dictatorship (1960–87) and the profound economic crisis (1997) that followed. What is emphatically different is South Korea’s remarkable success, which is in large part due to the launching of the Third Republic right in the middle of the Golden Age of capitalism when international trade seemed to be on the verge of limitless ascent. Stimulated by US military spending, but now independent of US economic control, South Korea, in the two decades of the dictatorship of General Park, enjoyed a period of unprecedented industrialization; so remarkable was it, in fact, that South Korea has acquired iconic status as an instance of state-led development. The growth involved extensive military intervention: dirigisme ruled, backed up by an inflated military, and an ubiquitous system of spies. Vital to this militarized dirigisme was Park’s nationalization of the banking system. The government also implemented severe price controls and it strictly controlled capital flight. Protectionism was everywhere. According to plan, exports took off: in 1963 they registered $86.8 million a year; by 1971 they had reached $1.067 billion. Yet, far from the case of South Korea being an example of enlightened military rule, it was the civilian directors of the country’s great, integrated, state-backed firms (including Hyundai, Daewoo, and Samsung), the chaebols, who remained firmly in the driver’s seat. If we wanted a name for South Korea under Park, we might call it a “national capitalist developmental dictatorship”; actually, it had a great deal in common with late-nineteenth-century Germany and Japan. The state-chaebol alliance was critical to rapid growth, and the chaebols were to become some of the world’s leading industrialists. This alliance was based on state-provided loans at low interest rates and the exclusion and repression of labour. Repressive labour policies kept workers’ wages much lower than those of their counterparts in other nations and prohibited labour unions. By 1984 sales by the top ten chaebols accounted for 67 per cent of the Korea GNP. The growth rate in the period of dictatorship stood over 12 per cent. By December 1987, when democratic elections were held for the first time since the Park coup in 1961, the recipe of export-led growth directed at the US market seems to have succeeded in South Korea as in few other places. In common with other Asian economies, it was often claimed, South Korea had achieved the fastest reduction of poverty for the greatest number of people in history. As the Economist summarized,
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South Korea’s expansion, like that of other Asian tigers, resembled the rapid development of communist states. In the 1950s some Eastern European economies achieved spectacular growth by squeezing more and more savings and labour out of their people. But this kind of authoritarian advance is neither pleasant or sustainable. South Korea’s labour policies were especially unpleasant. The country was built by men who worked appalling hours, led by obsessive bosses … Kim Woo Choong, who found the Daewoo industrial group in 1967, never took a day off until his son was killed in a car crash in 1990. His employees were expected to work 6 days a week, 12 hours a day, until the mid-1980s. Anyone who protested got fired, or jailed. Under Park Chung Hee as well as under South Korea’s next soldier president, Chun Doo Hwan, labour disputes were normally resolved by troops, tear gas and truncheons.14 Even as late as 1986, South Korean manufacturing employees worked the longest hours in the world with wages that were lower in their counterparts in Brazil, Mexico, Hong Kong, and Singapore. As political commentator Perry Anderson asked, “Is it proper to speak about development if it creates as politically repulsive a society as South Korea?” The answer seems to be a qualified “yes.” In the mid-1990’s on a visit to Seoul, Anderson noted: “What a Londoner notices first is the ways in which the city [Seoul] is more advanced than his own.”15 Following disorders in Pusan and Masan in the summer of 1979, Park was assassinated in public view in October by the maddened head of the Korean CIA, whom he had offended. By this time the great chaebols were up, running, and proliferating, and Korean capitalism no longer required state support. “In purely quantitative terms, the average number of subsidiaries under each chaebol rose from 4.2 in 1970 to 17.9 in 1990 … Perhaps even more important was that this rise was accompanied by a diversification into new sectors; the average number of industries in which each conglomerate owned subsidiaries rose from 7.7 in 1970 to 14 in 1989.16 As in Japan, the business of the state was business. Park’s successor, General Chun Doo Hwan, ruled South Korea as president for a seven-year term from 1980 to 1987 and then was succeeded by his hand-picked successor, General Roh Tae Woo, who held office until 1993. Despite their despotic rule and the violence that they
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were able to mete out against any form of popular protest – exemplified by the bloody repression that was visited on protesters in the city of Kwangju in May 1980 – a democracy movement had continued to grow to the point of the June Uprising of 1987, which mobilized hundreds of thousands of students, workers, farmers, and even middle-class professionals to demand Chun’s resignation and establish democracy. One enthusiastic commentator refers to this mobilization with the accolade that it was “one of the most extensive, organized and courageous cultures of political protest in the world.”17 It was this movement that brought an end to South Korea’s Cold War dictatorship and opened the door to the democracy that was manifest in the presidential election of December 1987. A democratic revolution had thus taken place. Roh Tae Woo’s presidency may be considered as the bridge leading away from dictatorship towards democracy. An even more defining break with the system installed by the Americans in 1945–48 came with the election of Roh Moo-hyun in 2003. This was not all. Another shift had also taken place by the late 1980s: South Korea’s industrial workforce had become more like those in the West, skilled, organized, and highly paid. The country thus would no longer be able to subsist on the export of garments, footwear, and textiles, and the economy would have to move to more capital- and knowledge-based industries. South Korean capitalists had by now begun to invest in Southeast Asia where labour was cheap and governments welcoming. During the subsequent civilian presidency of the conservative Kim Young-sam (r. 1993–98), the first elected civilian head of state since 1961, prosecutors brought charges of corruption and bribery against both generals. During the ensuing trials, it was disclosed that Chun had shaken down South Korean firms for $1.2 billion and Roh for $630 million. In 1996 a court found both generals guilty of sedition. Chun was sentenced to death and Roh to twenty-two and a half years in prison. Both were later pardoned by Kim Dae-jung (r. 1998–2002), who succeeded Kim Young-sam. Kim Dae-jung’s election was, especially for Washington and Wall Street, a nasty surprise: America had, after all, been a stalwart supporter of dictatorship. As Charles K. Armstrong notes The role of the United States in the process of South Korea’s democratisation has been ambiguous. On the one hand, the US provided the most important model of democratic political institutions for the
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Republic of Korea from the latter’s founding in 1948, and the idea of democracy on the American model was often the inspiration for anti-authoritarian protests in South Korea. On the other hand, the actual behaviour of US military and government representatives within South Korea, from the 1945–48 military occupation until the 1990s, was often in support of repressive political leaders in the name of security and the defence against communism. After the May 1980 massacre of civilian demonstrators in Kwangju, for which many Koreans held the US partly accountable, anti- government protests in Korea took a distinctly anti-American tone for the first time.18 What is more, spokesmen openly suggested that Kim Dae-jung (known as “DJ”) might not be able to deal the both the transition to democracy and fallout from the East Asian financial crisis of 1997 that affected South Korea deeply and forced it into the arms of the IMF.19 Earlier, he had narrowly missed being assassinated by the secret police working for the military regime. Left-of-centre, and a subtle critic of Washington, he was an open admirer of the neoliberal British prime minister, Tony Blair (r. 1997–2007). His aim was to balance the demand for increased political and economic justice on the one hand against the demands of the monopolist chaebols on the other. This was made all the more difficult by the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which was caused in large part by the over-borrowing and then bankruptcy of some of the largest chaebols. This financial crisis put South Korea in the debt of the IMF from which it had been forced to borrow $57 billion in the form of a rescue package. The IMF, consistent in its support for neoliberalism, demanded not only fiscal deregulation and the removal of restraints on foreign financial services firms but also fiscal austerity. Behind the IMF was the US Treasury. “The US saw this as an opportunity, as they did in many countries, to crack open all these things that for years have bothered them.”20 Yet, despite the door being opened to “market forces,” the stranglehold of the monopolistic chaebols was hardly reduced. As part of his role as a conciliator from June 2000, Kim Dae-jung had pursued a “Sunshine Policy” of reconciliation with North Korea (the DPRK). For this he was awarded a Nobel Peace prize and a high level of scepticism from the State Department of President George W. Bush, which insisted on seeing North Korea as part of an “axis of evil.” Kim Dae-jung was succeeded by his protégé, Roh Moo-hyun, a lawyer who was also part of the 1980s human rights movement. Although
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Roh’s ties were to the democracy movement, his policies led him to advance a neoliberal agenda. By late 2007 the Roh regime, like the military dictatorships that had preceded it, became itself haunted by the spectre of corruption. Roh, who had become unpopular for his willingness to throw himself at the feet of Washington21 – not only for the bilateral free trade agreement that he signed but also for his volunteering troops for the invasion of Iraq – himself barely survived impeachment proceedings. “A slew of bribery scandals, some of them involving Mr. Roh’s aids, has underlined the extent to which money still talks in Asia’s third largest economy,” reported the Financial Times. “Corruption remains endemic in Korean society,” it added.22 In December 2007, Lee Myung-bak, “The Bulldozer,” former head of Hyundai Construction, a branch of one of the great chaebols, was elected president of South Korea in a landslide. Amid the by now almost inevitable questions of corruption and protests against Lee’s right-wing agenda, within a hundred days of his inauguration in February 2008, the new president’s support had collapsed. The streets of Seoul echoed to the cries of “Dokje Tado!” (“Down With Dictatorship”). In June he threw himself on the mercy of the electorate: “I reproach myself for not serving the public properly,” he apologized, cancelling his program for privatizing water, gas, and electricity and offering sops to small businesses and low-income families. guerrillas in power : the democratic people ’s republic of korea , 1953–2005
Before we consider the second of the Asian Tigers, we should round off our history of Korea with an account of the northern half of the country, the DPRK, which is the mirror opposite to the capitalist success story in the south. The DPRK followed the same revolutionary path of land reform and collectivization that had been undertaken in the Soviet Union in the 1930s and China in the 1950s. Under the Japanese, the mass of Korean peasants were tenants living at a level of bare subsistence; millions had no land at all while others had hardly enough to survive. Land reform was thus immensely popular, not the least among women, who were doubly oppressed. As one American observer noted, “half the population of north Korea was given a tangible stake in the regime and at the same time the north Korean government gained an important propaganda weapon in its campaign against the south.”23 In the wake of the
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land reform of March 1946 state farms became dominant and cooperatives disappeared; private plots were limited to 100 square metres. For women and the poor peasant majority, benefits were huge and tangible: “North Korean women … experienced a genuine liberation greater than women in any East Asian society of the time.”24 Between 1945 and 1948, with education no longer restricted to the children of the elite, enrolment in primary school quadrupled. In fact, a kind of affirmative action program applied whereby the children of the lower class were favoured over those of their betters. Even teachers were selected according to their class backgrounds; in one province, over half were of “poor peasant” origins. The possession of the kinds of social capital that comes with class privilege was at a stroke thus discounted as the class pyramid was turned on its head. The industrial development of the north followed the Stalinist model. According to Charles Armstrong, In the 1940s, the Soviet-Stalinist model of development was still very attractive to many people in what would be known as the “Third World.” The Soviet experience appeared to be the single successful model of rapid industrialization in a backward agrarian society that was capable of maintaining political independence and freedom from the capitalist world economy … Two years after liberation, North Korea embarked on an ambitious project of planned economic growth, concentrating on construction, steel, chemicals, mining, and other heavy industries. The regime remained committed to the Stalinist path of production thereafter. For more than twenty years, a program of heavy industry, limited consumer goods, withdrawal from the capitalist world-economy, and planned production seemed to work well, giving North Korea an impressive rate of economic growth far beyond that of the South. By the 1970s, however, such a development path was showing limited returns, and by the 1990s the North Korean economy was in a seemingly intractable state of crisis.25 For several decades, thus, after the end of the war in 1953, the North Korean economic picture looked rosy. As one British sociologist opined, “The achievements of the Korean Workers Party [the governing party of North Korea] are clearly remarkable and will be remembered long after the tottering neo-colony in South Korea has finally collapsed.”26 By the 1960s Marxism-Leninism had been supplanted as the official doctrine
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by juche, “self-reliance.” According to a 1978 CIA report, grain production had grown more rapidly in the DPRK than in South Korea, living standards in rural areas were higher, agriculture was mechanized, and fertilizer use was the highest in the world. “North Korea’s average food intake was higher than South Korea’s in 1982, averaging 3,051 calories compared with 2,936; both were well over UN base levels.”27 Under the banners of juche, heavy industry had continued to expand and North Korea had become an impressive source of all kinds of industrial goods from cars to arms. What was the secret? First, in common with the case of South Korea, the ruthless organization of labour. Second, the dampening down of consumer demands. Third, huge foreign aid from the Soviet Union in the form of technical assistance, loans, and subsidized oil. Yet, from the 1980s the government in the North, guided by the principles of Kimilsungism became acutely conscious that production was falling behind the South. Joint ventures, especially with Korean capitalists abroad, were encouraged. One unsolved aspect of North Korea’s economic development is the fact that there was a fall in capital imports, especially from the Soviet Union, from the mid-1980s. By the end of that decade, Moscow began its dramatic disengagement from an ally that it had supported for five decades. By the 1990s the crisis of the North was compounded by famine, in part caused by floods and drought in 1995–97. In some estimates, these conditions had led to between half a million and a million deaths. This natural disaster was made worse by the fact that Soviet aid and markets were no longer available; oil now had to be bought at world prices. The decline in petroleum imports led to a drop in industrial production, especially fertilizers. By the late 1990s the economy of North Korea was running at less than 50 per cent of capacity. Even agricultural production subsided. According to UN estimates, agricultural production stood at 4 million tons in 1995 and dropped to 2.8 million for each of the next two years before rising to 3.5 million in 2001. In the late 1990s famine was widespread, although there was some recovery in the next few years. By 1994 income per head in North Korea had fallen to one-eighth of the income in South Korea. From 1995 China provided between half and one million tons of food aid annually. In that year Kim Il-Sung, “the Great Leader,” the “Respected and Beloved Leader,” the “Iron-Willed and Ever Victorious Commander,” and the world’s longest-surviving head of state, died. Under his son and successor Kim Jong-Il (b. 1942), the DPRK’s “Dear Leader,” policy changed; on 1 July 2002 a radical set of economic reforms was undertaken that
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hinted at the kind of changes already well entrenched in China. Four special economic zones were created and rationing as well as state subsidies were ended. “We are reforming the economic system on the basis of productivity,” explained a North Korean economist. The Asian Wall Street Journal went on: “With the DPRK economy in a shambles and the state system of production and rationing in disarray, the government has had no choice but to let the people fend for themselves in the open market.”28 Production for the export market now followed the path of certain other non-Western economies as earnings from arms and drugs (heroin, cocaine, and meta-amphetamines) delivered as much as $100 million to North Korea’s economy. The hermit kingdom had thus become the pusher kingdom, the world’s third largest producer of opium. In June 2000, without consulting Washington, the president of South Korea, Kim Dae-jung undertook a breakthrough mission to Pyongyang. A few months later, in October, talks opened in Pyongyang involving the US secretary of state; these talks were sabotaged, however, when George W. Bush succeeded Bill Clinton as president in early 2001. When Kim Dae-jung visited Washington in March 2001, Bush brushed him off. The US media had little trouble with this new bellicosity; on its 13 January 2003 cover, Newsweek carried a photo of Kim Jong-Il, above the inscription, “North Korea’s Dr Evil.” Later, in his State of the Union address President Bush denounced Pyongyang as “an oppressive regime [that] rules a people living in fear and starvation whose ‘blackmail’ would not be tolerated.”29 Although North Korea now appeared to be in the crosshairs of the huntsmen of the US State and Defence departments, the successor of Kim Dae-jung, Roh Moo-hyun, pledged to continue Kim’s policy of openness to the North. Conscious of a political climate change in Washington and watching the US invasion of Iraq, the regime in Pyongyang feared that it might be next. In April 2003 it announced that only by arming itself with a tremendous military deterrent could it guarantee its own security; this deterrent took the form of nuclear-tipped missiles, which could probably have reached not only South Korea, where there were nearly 38,000 American troops still stationed, but also Japan and the giant US military base on Okinawa. It was this possibility that entitled North Korea to be included, if only fleetingly, in the “axis of evil.” The demise of North Korea, like that of Pakistan, as we shall see, is frequently predicted. In the June 2003 words of the US deputy defence secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, infamous as one of the planners of the invasion of Iraq, “North Korea is teetering on brink of collapse.” “When
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does the statute of limitations run out on being systematically wrong?” Cumings has wondered.30 taiwan
Taiwan did not become a part of the Chinese Empire until the early seventeenth century, as Jonathan Spence explains: “In the later years of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), Taiwan was still largely unknown: dangerous seas, typhoons, and sandy shoals protected its coasts; flat, malarial plains along the west, backed by inhospitable mountain ranges sealed its isolation. Taiwan’s unfriendly aboriginal populations further discouraged exploration or settlement by outsiders.”31 After he had attained power in 1644, the Manchu emperor sought to extend his rule over the whole of China. In 1683 he sent a fleet under Admiral Shi to rid Taiwan of pirates, and from that year Taiwan became an offshore annex of the Chinese empire. It remained part of the empire for over two centuries until it was handed over to the Japanese victors in the aftermath of the Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95. Taiwan remained under the control of Tokyo and sent up to 90 per cent of its exports of mainly foodstuffs to Japan until the Japanese defeat in 1945. In this period the fate of Taiwan resembled that of Korea in that its economic development was organized around the needs of Japan and its people educated in the values of Japanese life. The difference was that, whereas in Korea the local elite became engaged in commerce and industry, in Taiwan the emergence of such an elite was suppressed as long as Japan ruled. Still, by 1945, having escaped the war on the mainland, it was relatively prosperous. Taiwan’s future had been determined during World War II by the Allied leaders, amongst whom was Jiang Jieshi, who we met in Chapter 2, the leader of the Chinese Nationalists (Guomindang); the Americans and the British agreed that Taiwan was to revert to Chinese rule after the defeat of Japan. Thus, from late 1945 a second colonial occupation began under a military administration installed by Jiang. This occupation was as corrupt and heavy-handed as Jiang’s mainland government and led to anti-government riots in February 1947. Nationalist troops responded by firing on the demonstrators and then by rounding up and executing anti-Nationalist dissidents; between 10,000 and 20,000 were killed and the island’s indigenous social and economic elite was largely eliminated. Their repressive task successfully completed, Jiang’s minions now cleared the way for the full-scale occupation of the island by the retreating Nationalist government. From 1948 the officer corps still
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loyal to Jiang, together with elite regiments and hangers-on, crossed the Formosa Strait in a forlorn mass exodus, together with the bullion, priceless art, and even archives that had been removed from Beijing. By 1949 there were a million Nationalist troops on the island, backed up by the tattered remnants of Jiang’s navy and air force. From this point both the society and economy of the “Republic of China,” as Taiwan was now dubbed, became transformed. First of all, it became a “developmental state,” rather like South Korea under Park. Since there existed on the island no capitalist class to contend with, Jiang and his court had a carte blanche on which to write the rules of industrial development. Like the followers of Rhee in South Korea and Suharto in Indonesia, his supporters become the privileged recipients of government economic assistance. The indigenous Taiwanese were temporarily frozen out although they, too, benefited from the land reform policies of the Guomindang government and the generalized boom that the island enjoyed after 1950. As a consequence of US military investment and land reform, the economy from the 1960s began to pass out of its cocoon stage of economic growth into the next era of light industrial development increasingly aimed at overseas, especially US, markets. As exports took off per capita income began to rise dramatically. By 1970, 50 per cent of South Korean exports had been aimed at America, but by 1985 this had dropped to under 40 per cent and thereafter continued to fall. By 2000–01, exports from both Taiwan and South Korea, by now mainly in the high technology field, suddenly began to experience a sharp decline. The higher cost of labour and the increase in competition from late-arriving industrializers now meant that exporters had to find new products or new markets. Any thoughts that the government of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) might have had concerning attacking Jiang’s island refuge were permanently sidelined with the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950. As a consequence of the war, Taiwan was recruited to become part of the American glacis of bases stretching from Japan southwards and included Okinawa, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Thailand that were intended to block any expansionism of Beijing. Guarding the Formosa Straits, and keeping Taiwan safe for the Guomindang dictatorship, was an armada in the form of the US Navy’s Seventh Fleet. In 1954 the US signed a mutual defence pact with Taiwan similar to the one already signed with the Philippines in the same year. Shelving any plans for invading the island, Zhou Enlai, the foreign minister of
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the People’s Republic, announced in May 1955 that Beijing would strive for the liberation of Taiwan by peaceful means. Ignoring this, in 1957 the US deployed missiles in Taiwan that could deliver nuclear warheads to China. The Cold War in East Asia was now at its peak; whether it would become a hot war was anybody’s guess. Taiwan remained under the authoritarian rule of the Guomindang until Jiang Jieshih died in 1975. He was succeeded by his son, Jiang Ching-kuo, who remained president from 1978 until he died. But while Jiang still lived, the wintery winds of the Cold War had become less chilling. The first sign of spring took the form of negotiations between Canada and the People’s Republic in 1970. In November the first Canadian diplomat arrived in Beijing, and in February 1971 the Chinese opened their embassy in Ottawa. Later that year the General Assembly of the UN voted narrowly, and against pressure from Washington, to remove Taiwan from the Chinese seat on the Security Council and give it to the People’s Republic government instead. More dramatically came the visit to Beijing of President Nixon, previously a furious anti-communist, on 21 February 1972, a year after the embassy in Ottawa had been opened. In a joint communiqué issued a week later, the Americans conceded that Taiwan was a part of China and that they, too, were interested in a peaceful settlement of the issue. Yet on the issue of present status of Taiwan, neither side went any further. Meantime, a remarkable shift was about to sweep over the People’s Republic and this had more to do with the passing of time and less with US initiatives. For gradually in Beijing the revolutionary Old Guard had begun to die off, starting with the death of the premier, Zhou Enlai, in January and continuing with the passing of Mao Zedong in September 1976. More than Nixon’s visit in 1972, it was that of the Grim Reaper four years later that changed the Chinese world. Three years later, in 1979, Beijing and Washington “normalized” relations and agreed that all American military personnel would be withdrawn from Taiwan. Beijing then announced that Taiwan would be brought “back to the embrace of the motherland” but when and how was left unstated. In the same year, Deng Xiaoping opened up China’s Special Economic Zones along the south coast to attract investment from the Chinese diaspora, particularly Taiwan. In fact, Beijing offered special incentives to attract Taiwanese investment and trade as well as welcoming visits to the mainland by the Taiwanese themselves. Since then, the ties between Taiwan and the Mainland have multiplied dramatically. Taiwan firms, beginning with small labor-intensive
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shoe and toy producers and gradually extending to large high-tech companies like Taiwan Semiconductor … moved their factories to the Mainland to find cheaper land, facilities, and labour. The economic attraction was so strong that businesses evaded Taiwan governments regulations designed to limit the island’s economic dependence on China. China has become Taiwan’s number one export market, and Taiwan the second-largest source of foreign investment in China … By the end of 2005, Taiwan’s exports to China (including Hong Kong) exceeded its exports to the United States, Japan, and Europe combined … More than one million of Taiwan’s twenty-three million people now live, work, go to school, and get married in China.32 With economic transformation came political change. In the years before his death in 1988, Jiang Ching-kuo had begun a process of democratic reform. His successor, the native Taiwanese, Lee Teng-hui (r. 1996–2000), who was the first president to be elected in a popular vote, abandoned the anti-PRC rhetoric of his predecessor although his successor, Chen Shui-bian (r. 2000–08) dropped a bombshell when in 2002 he mentioned his “two states theory,” affirming the effective independence of Taiwan. Thus the debate over the relationship between the two states continued with Beijing repeating the lines of “one country, two systems” and stressing the “one-China principle” and Taiwan continuing to insist on independence and to bristle with imported arms; in the years 1993 through 1997, for instance, Taiwan became one of the world’s five leading arms importers – alongside Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, and South Korea, all of which were closely bound to US strategic designs. China meanwhile has failed entirely to reconcile itself to the independent existence of Taiwan. hong kong and singapore
Hong Kong and Singapore share similar features: both are islands off the shore of mainland Asia, both are predominantly Chinese and both were British colonies. Further, most of the Chinese in Singapore were recruited in the nineteenth century when Hong Kong became the centre of the global trade in indentured Chinese labourers, that is, “coolies.” Most of these labourers came from Guandong and Fujian provinces on the mainland and were shipped from Hong Kong.
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Hong Kong was removed from China in 1842 as part of the spoils that went to the British victors of the Opium Wars. It was expanded in two stages, first, with the addition of the adjacent mainland peninsula of Kowloon in 1860, and second, in 1898, when the New Territories were added on the basis of a ninety-nine-year lease. This expanded Hong Kong lasted until the British relinquished the colony in 1997. The British in Hong Kong boasted that it was their laissez-faire policy that was essential to the prosperity of the colony. This policy included privileging British commercial firms, discouraging manufacturing and neglecting both education and Chinese participation in local government. In spite of this, with the decline of Shanghai in the 1950s, Hong Kong became China’s new centre of both trade and industry. Its population of a starving 600,000 in 1945 increased to a well-fed six million fifty years later and the standard of living of its inhabitants had gone from marginal to comfortable. That the continued possession of Hong Kong was acceptable by the PRC was signalled in 1971 when the Chinese premier, Zhou Enlai, reassured the British that China would not seek to recover Hong Kong until the expiry of the lease on the New Territories in 1997. Even before World War II Hong Kong had been not merely a standalone commercial centre but a vital link in the chain of expatriate Chinese communities running across the South China Sea to Taipei, Manila, Singapore, and beyond. In the late 1970s when “reformism” began to supersede “Maoism” in the PRC, Hong Kong capitalism further expanded to spread its influence across the boundaries of the colony to the mainland. By the early 1980s, three of the four million workers employed by Hong Kong firms actually worked across the frontier in Guangdong Province. Under Deng Xiaoping four Special Economic Zones were opened in the Pearl River Delta area, adjacent to Hong Kong, specifically to attract the capital and skills that had been amassed in the colony. By 1985 Hong Kong had become the main trading partner of the PRC as well as being its main foreign direct investor, accounting for 60 to 80 per cent of the total capital invested in China. Most of this was, in fact, invested in Guangdong Province. Hong Kong had now become the classroom where would-be capitalists under Deng learned their lessons, lessons that the reformers of a century earlier had summed up in the words, Zhong xue wei ti, Xi xue wei yong (“Chinese learning for the essentials and Western learning for the practicalities”). When Hong Kong became independent on 1 July 1997, the whole of the colony was handed over to the government of the People’s Republic,
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the rulers of which guaranteed to the British the face-saving promise that in Hong Kong the preservation of a high degree of autonomy would be assured. In common with most colonial territories, as we shall see, the British had been reluctant to educate the natives in the arts of government until the eleventh hour. Thus, before the 1990s, the highest level of the colonial administration was still dominated by British expatriates. The first elections to the Legislative Council (“Legco”) of Hong Kong did not come until 1991, three decades after most of British Africa, a colonial world that had far lower levels of literacy and business experience, had become independent. Although these elections hardly amounted to a “transfer of power,” they did have considerable symbolic value. A scant six years later, when the British left, they effectively abandoned the colony as they had Palestine forty years earlier, bands playing, bunting fluttering, and tears flowing. As for the people of Hong Kong, in 1997 when the British steamed away and the representatives of Beijing took over the colony, the majority saw themselves as “Hongkongers,” not citizens of the PRC. In certain respects their sentiments resembled those of the people of Taiwan, and in others, such as the combination of advanced economic opportunities and retarded democratic practice, they were more like the people of Singapore. Singapore, initially merely a British entrepôt, became a formal Crown colony in 1842 on the basis of a treaty between the British and the Dutch that divided Malay-speaking Southeast Asia into two separate spheres: “British Malaya” and the “Dutch East Indies.” British Malaya included the whole of the Malay peninsula and notably the large towns of Penang, Melaka (Malacca), and Singapore. Later this collection of possessions became known as the “Straits Settlements.” Singapore itself was to become Britain’s key commercial and military base east of Suez, especially after the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869. Between 1824 and 1872, its trade had grown eightfold. Not only Singapore’s trade had grown – its population increased from 10,000 to 97,000 between 1824 and 1872, especially due to the migration of Chinese “coolies.” Most of the Chinese migrants had gone first to Malaya to work in British-owned tin mines and rubber plantations and only later moved to Singapore as labourers and petty merchants. By the early twentieth century the migrants had come together to form voluntary organizations that cut across linguistic and cultural
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boundaries and unified the migrants providing them with social assistance and economic support despite their varied background. The Straits Chinese British Association was formed in 1900 and the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce in 1906. These organizations blossomed into lobbies that were to strengthen the government-business nexus that flourished after independence. Only a small minority of the Chinese became capitalists, however, the majority remaining as petty entrepreneurs or workers. The fall of Singapore in January 1940, after a surprisingly short resistance, was seen as calamitous and its return to British hands in 1945, after 1,297 days in Japanese hands, was viewed with relief. The British, who now returned to Asia as conquerors determined to rehabilitate their imperial estates, barely recognized how the war had transformed the scene and, especially, how it had stimulated nationalism. In fact, colonialism in Asia in the postwar era was to have a surprisingly short shelf life. Singapore, as part of a federated state put together by the British, was christened “Malaysia” in 1962. Malaysia became independent a year later, less than two decades after it had been reoccupied. More surprises followed: after a turbulent two years, Singapore was more or less evicted from Malaysia and became, on 9 August 1965, an independent state (or, actually, a “city state”; for the total land area of Singapore is a mere 704 square kilometres, not quite half the size of the urban area of Montreal, 1,677 square kilometres, another island city). The rest of Malaysia, including a mainland centre and archipelagic territories (Sabah and Sarawak on Kalimantan) remained united. Whereas the government of Malaysia became resolutely, and even vindictively Malay, Singapore remained overwhelming Chinese.33 Perhaps more importantly, it was not until Singapore became independent that Chinese economic interests anywhere in Southeast Asia became fully secure. There had been anti-Chinese riots in Indonesia; in 1969 they broke out in Malaysia where the role of the substantial Chinese population was resented by the Malay majority. The success of Singapore in economic and political terms was dazzling. In the two decades after 1965, it fully completed the transition from a colonial entrepôt to Southeast Asia’s most thriving capitalist state – in sum, the Hong Kong of Southeast Asia. In the process its per capita income rose from $1,000 in the early 1960s to $15,000 in 1995; it had thus been transformed from a poor backwater into a workers’ paradise where a generous range of social and even cultural amenities, including
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health care and housing, were provided to its population of 4.68 million (2007) and where unemployment was virtually non-existent. By the mid1990s infant mortality levels were half of those of the United States. Over the earlier decades of this period the majority of its citizens remained poorly educated or not educated at all, while its ruling elite, comprising a mixture of senior civil servants and rich businessmen, were both highly educated and politically cohesive. The political process bears a limited resemblance to that of the People’s Republic, including the obligatory reference to “People,” but minus the rhetoric about communism and the billion plus population. The party machine had from its early years been carefully selective in vetting and approving its parliamentary candidates, who were frequently hand-picked by the prime minister and senior cabinet colleagues. By the 1980s most Singapore members of parliament … had backgrounds in the state bureaucracy, business management, law, and the universities rather than direct experience in grass-roots politics. Once in parliament they underwent training regimes, mentored by senior colleagues, that laid great emphasis on policy-making skills and the importance of party loyalty and teamwork. Promising members were groomed for junior and, later, higher office.34 This elite was moulded by Lee Kuan Yew, a Cambridge-educated lawyer who headed the People’s Action Party (PAP). From the late 1960s the PAP won every election with substantial majorities, at least until the elections of 1980s when its popularity slumped, relatively, to a low of 62 per cent of the popular vote. Throughout the 1980s not a single opposition member sat in the Singapore parliament. Lee remained prime minister from the victory of the PAP in 1959 to 1990. His successor was Goh Chok Tong, a businessman who was, like Lee, English-educated and a party stalwart. In 1991 Goh appointed as his deputy prime minister Lee’s Cambridge- and Harvard-educated son, Lee Hsien Loong, who succeeded him in 1994. Under Goh the party continued its gradual shift rightwards from authoritarian welfarism to a more liberal one-party dictatorship where, from the beginning, globalization was embraced rather than shunned. Thus the planners of the economy of Singapore, while dirigistes, have never been economic nationalists much less socialists. The economic strategy that they thus repudiated was ISI, that which they embraced from the late 1960s, an “export-oriented industrial” (EOI) programme. Singapore in fact pioneered the retreat
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from ISI towards EOI in the whole region. Following Singapore in adopting the EOI program were Malaysia in the early 1970s and Thailand and to a lesser extent the Philippines in the late 1970s and ’80s. So rapid was Singapore’s development that by the mid-1970s there was already a shortage of labour on the island. By the mid-1980s Singapore had moved to capital-intensive industries, driving out lowend, labour-intensive industries to its Southeast Asian neighbours and to China. It was to these neighbours that Singapore’s investors also moved their capital. This was in the hands not only of private investors but also firms with strong links to the government. Singapore thus became one of the region’s major capital exporters. In the collapse of the Asian economies in 1997 that we have already mentioned in the previous chapter, the GDP increase of Singapore tumbled from 8.7 per cent in 1997 to 0.4 per cent in 1998. Yet, in the elections of 2001, the PAP still captured eighty-two out of eighty-four parliamentary seats. By 2006 Singapore’s economy was growing at the rate of 7.9 per cent and the city-state had become the world’s seventeenth largest economy, boasting of the world’s busiest port (in terms of tonnage shipped) and the fourth largest foreign exchange centre (after London, New York, and Tokyo). Plans to turn Singapore into Asia’s premier financial centre were on the drawing boards from the 1990s. There remained two unsettling corollaries of Singapore’s stellar economic performance. The first was its Orwellian authoritarianism. Both religious and political groups perceived as threatening the hegemony of the People’s Action Party have been relentlessly harassed. In the words of Diane Mauzy and R.S. Milne, “What everyone can agree upon, include the PAP leaders, is that Singapore is not a liberal democracy.”35 State security agencies have persecuted at different times religious groups such as the Jehovah’s Witnesses and Falungong, Christian human rights activists (described as “Marxist conspirators”), as well as Chineselanguage chauvinists who have threatened the city-state’s fine ethnic balance. Singapore’s draconian laws have limited the circulation of foreign journals – including the business-oriented Far Eastern Economic Review – and led to the country having one of the highest rates of capital punishment in the world, although most of its victims are Thais and Malaysians convicted of smuggling drugs. The second apparent consequence of prosperity is a fertility rate that seems almost to have gone into free-fall dropping from 3.5 to 1.7 over
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the period from 1965 to 1990. By the beginning of the twenty-first century with a birthrate of 10.1 per 1,000 (2006), it had the third lowest fertility rate in the world. This prompted the government in the direction not only of pro-natalist policies but sex advisory clinics. Although serious studies are not yet able to confirm any hypotheses, it could be argued, tentatively, that improved living standards, secured by regimentation and guarded by repression, may discourage sexual practice. realignments
As China came to eclipse Japan as the most competitive Asian exporter, the four Tigers were forced to rapidly revise their economic plans. As The Economist noted, “Japan, South Korea and Taiwan fear a ‘hollowing out’ of their industries, as factories move to low-cost China. Southeast Asia worries about ‘dislocation’ in trade and investment flows … China is no [flying] goose … because it makes simple goods and sophisticated ones at the same time; rag nappies and microchips … [It] makes goods spanning the entire value chain, on a scale that determines world prices. Hence East Asia’s anxiety. If China is more efficient than everything, what is there left for its neighbours to do?”36 Ho-Fung Hung explains that whereas in 1985, Japan sent a mere 7.1 per cent of its exports to China and a whopping 37.6 per cent to the United States, by 2005, the exports to China had nearly doubled (13.5 per cent) and those to the United States nearly halved (22.9 per cent). South Korea’s exports to China had gone from zero in 1985 to 21.8 per cent in 2005, while exports to the US had dropped from 35.6 per cent to 14.6 per cent while Taiwan’s exports to China had increased also from zero per cent in 1985 to 22 per cent in 2005 while exports to the United States had dropped from 18.1 to 14.7.
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6 A Tryst With Neoliberalism: India after the Permit Raj Consider India. India fought for, and won independence from colonial rule in 1947, and since then has been trying to write its own rags to riches story. At one level, it has succeeded. Today, India is, in the imagination of many outside the country, the place where all the jobs have flown, a Neverland of highly skilled workers willing to toil for very little. The new maharajas of the IT industry routinely trumpet the industry’s growth rate (19 per cent per year between 2004 and 2008) and hail the pool of talent created by the government’s investment in education. Much has been banked on this myth. Raj Patel, Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World’s Food System
introduction
Of Europe’s colonial fiefs, none surpassed India in size or wealth. Ruled from 1526 by the Muslim Mughals, a dynasty with origins in Afghanistan and cultural and political roots in Persia and Central Asia, India had been conquered piecemeal by the British East India Company from 1757. After a century of rule by the company, in 1857 a widespread revolt took place that shook British domination to its foundations. As a consequence, India was put under the direct rule of the British Crown. In reaction to the revolt, the British liquidated the family of the former Mughal emperor and sent the emperor himself packing off to exile. Not only was the tolerant but haphazard administration of the company now at and end but, more significantly, Muslim rule in India was extinguished. Not since the extirpation of the last Muslim emirate in Spain in 1492 had such a catastrophe befallen the Muslim world. Although the Muslims of India would become marginalized and impoverished, unlike the case of Spain, they would hardly be extinguished. But with the
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destruction of the Muslim rulers of the raj rose others – some Bengalis, others Punjabis, Parsis, Gujeratis, and even dalits, all struggling to adapt to a world still dominated by Brahmins and always, in one form or other, capitalist. In celebration of the re-establishment of British rule after the revolt of 1857 and to advertise Britain’s now extensive empire, Queen Victoria (r. 1837–1901) was given the grandiose title, “Empress of India.” Under the queen and her descendants, the British continued to rule India until 1947. Although in the past imperial historians liked to see the Indians as having benefited from the enlightenment that British rule brought them after centuries of medieval ossification, an alternative view, one that I will refer to below, is that the British actually retarded India’s modernity by insisting on colonialist autocracy and assuring continued social stagnation and distorted economic development. British India included what we now know as Pakistan and Bangladesh, both of which were wrenched from India’s flanks as a condition of independence in 1947. Even before this, however, India had never been an absolutely fixed physical entity; centred in the north in the great valleys of the Indus and the Ganges, under the Mughals and the dynasties that preceded them, India had expanded southwards and eastwards, spreading the particularly syncretic Muslim culture that it incubated. The British pushed it further into the Himalayas where “British India” absorbed parts of Nepal and Bhutan and grasped at, but failed to hold, Afghanistan. To the east of the subcontinent, wars in 1826 and 1886 had added to India the hill country that had previously been part of Burma; while from the colonial capitals of India, first Calcutta and then New Delhi, the British sent officials to govern the Arab statelets of the Persian Gulf to the west and Burma to the east and dispatched colonial soldiers to secure places as far afield as Egypt, Libya, Italy, East Africa, Mesopotamia, Burma, Indonesia, Malaya, and Indochina. No colonial centre in the modern period – not Hanoi or Cairo or Dakar – radiated influence as powerfully and broadly as the colonial capital of India. And in no European colonial territory, other than the white dominions and South Africa, was the influence of the colonizer as ineradicable as was British influence in India. While it is obvious that the British were, by present standards, racists and plunderers, there is no way of knowing what India might have been without them. Certainly the forces of international trade were already at work before the British takeover – old crops like indigo and sugarcane were being commercialized and new ones like tobacco and maize
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had been introduced. Banking, credit, and even money itself were all in the process of transformation as the whole region was stimulated by swelling global demand. The same demand had led to a greater tendency towards regional autonomy and this had weakened Mughal control over its provinces. Following the death of the emperor Aurangzeb in 1707, Mughal rule went into rapid, although perhaps not irreversible, decline. There were even deeper structural shifts that weakened the Mughals. Although India was overwhelmingly agricultural, by comparison to China or Japan its agricultural technology was remarkably backwards. The mass of the population thus lived in great poverty, paying their native rulers huge rents even by Chinese standards.1 Mughal India was thus a remarkable structure, a huge state apparatus comprising an opulent court decorated by an immense population of richly attired flunkies and hangers-on, massive elephant-borne armies, material riches beyond imagination, resting on a population capable of high levels of artisanal production in some areas, such as textiles, but whose condition varied from merely immiserated to chronically starving. Tirthankar Roy provides a simple but clear image of the effects on the weakened structure of the Mughals by the imposition of British rule. The rise of British rule was not just a political change. The new rulers did not arise from the established ruling class. They were foreigners. The British were a mercantile population turning industrial by the end of the eighteenth century, whereas India was overwhelmingly agricultural. Being foreigners and merchants, the new regime could initiate economic policies and principles of governance that upset the established (agrarian) order as never before. In science and technology, political organization, and economic activity, eighteenth century Europe was modernizing at unprecedented speed. Europeans had the military and the ideological means, the “hardware” and the “software,” necessary to create a far more centralized and bureaucratic state in India than what the region had seen before. Politics aided the integration of India into world trade and an unfolding international division of labour. The British had access to superior knowledge about industry and trade, which the empire bought within reach of Indians. Thus, major forms of transformation – class structure, commercialization, formation of a modern state, technology – had roots in the colonial encounter. Independent India took over from the political-economic- administrative structure created by British rule.2
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The superior knowledge brought within reach of Indians produced a remarkable strata of Indians, some of great and others of middling wealth, and most of whom owed the preservation of their status to British rule. These wanted a voice in the governing what they, if not the British, saw as the emerging Indian nation. Many of them spoke and read English and by this means had access to a wider world and a more advanced economic culture than did the colonial subjects in the East Indies, for instance, who spoke and read only Dutch. the indian national congress
Unlike the case of Indonesia or Vietnam, the emergent national political culture of India, informed, tainted, and even distorted by colonialism as it was, had been continuous from 1885 when the Indian National Congress was formed. This party, at first little more than an elite talking shop, but always resolutely modernist and thus secular, monopolized discussions about the future of India from the time of its founding until independence in 1947. And between independence and the present, except for short breaks, it has remained the governing party of India. Its longevity is thus exceptional: it was founded before nationalist or communist parties anywhere else in Asia and has outlived many of them. That said, even in spite of pressures within to move in more radical directions, it has remained implacably reformist and never revolutionary for the plain reason that it has normally been dominated by the owners of property, rural, urban, agricultural, industrial, and commercial while its leadership has largely been recruited from the Brahmin caste. Its capacity for leading the kind of radical transformation that we have seen in China and Vietnam, and even in Korea, in which agrarian relations between rich landowners and poor peasants was dissolved, was thus severely inhibited. If Congress hasn’t actually owned India for all the years since the late nineteenth century, it has gone, in stages, from being a respectful spectator, to a noisy minority shareholder, to a full-time proprietor, back to being a minority shareholder. And unlike the Chinese Communist Party, which had risen and fallen – at one time dominating a small part of China in the 1920s, then nearly losing even that part in the 1930s and then grabbing it back in the 1940s – India has remained, astonishingly, a democracy sustained by a free press, the intelligence and freedom of which puts most Western, and especially North American, countries to shame. But it is a democracy of an unusual kind in which a single,
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bourgeois, political party, run by lawyers and magnates and supported by a prosperous farmers and a large urban middle class, has maintained a vice-like grip over an immense and surprisingly illiterate rural and urban populations who, election after election, despite disappointments, continue to vote in the hopes of changing the status quo. Although in the twentieth century there have been wars, pogroms, and famines in India, there have been no major breaks or reversals, thus no civil wars such as the one that ravaged China until 1949, no invasions such as that which gutted Korea between 1950 and 1954 or bloodied Vietnam in the American era (1954–75). Nor have there been palace coups that put an end to regimes, such as those that punctuated the regime of South Korea’s General Park Chung Hee, bringing him into power in 1961 and destroying him in 1979, or national bloodbaths such as destroyed the Indonesian Communist Party in 1966. Even the wars against Pakistan (1947, 1965, 1971) and China (1962), have been as brief as they have been sudden. This unusual imperturbability is no less true at the political level; for although we see the periodic ouster of Congress from power and, more significantly, the move, overseen by Congress itself, from statism to neoliberalism in the closing decades of the twentieth century, really radical breaks are unknown. And even these shifts lack the deadly drama of regime change elsewhere, much less the catastrophic introduction of liberalization in Russia in the 1990s. Thus, even the meltdown that struck the Southeast Asian economies in 1997 and sent the managers of the South Korean economy running into the arms of the IMF barely afflicted India. Compared to other postcolonial states from Burma to Bolivia, then, India’s stability measures up to the sternest standards of the postwar West. independence
In January 1930 the Indian National Congress passed a resolution in support of purna swaraj, “complete independence.” Seventeen years later India became an independent state. The moment of transfer of power, at midnight on 14–15 August 1947, was a time of rejoicing, widespread tension, and irremediable tragedy. It was overseen, as it had been guided in the previous decades, by Jawaharlal Nehru (1889–1964), the dazzlingly gifted, Cambridge-educated Brahmin, whose leadership of the nationalist movement had guaranteed him the status as India’s first prime minister. No other politician could have seized the moment with the eloquence that Nehru did in his speech celebrating the midnight
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dawning of Indian independence: “Long years ago we made a tryst with destiny, and now the time comes when we shall redeem our pledge, not wholly or in full measure, but very substantially. At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom … It is fitting that at this solemn moment, we take the pledge of dedication to the service of India and her people and to the still larger cause of humanity.” But the birth of India was bloody and uncertain and took place at a time of complex tensions between workers, peasants, and capitalists, on the one hand, and between the major religious communities, and especially Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, on the other. This tension was underpinned in part by the desperation caused by widespread hunger; in the aftermath of the great Bengal famine of 1943 in which three million had died as a consequence of incompetent food allocation, nearly half the Indian population was still subject to food rationing. On the other part, it was driven by an anti-imperial populism. As the possibility of a separate state for Muslims turned into a reality – one that we shall trace in more detail in the next chapter – old rivalries between Muslims and Hindus and between rich and poor had been stoked up to lead to a cauldron of bloody enmities. Such were hardly new, although their intensity was. This intensity had been magnified by the catalytic effects of World War II in which two and a half million Indians – Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, and others – had fought, mainly as a part of British imperial forces, in campaigns that raged across North Africa, in Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. The Indians enlisted in these conflicts, like the Africans who fought beside them, had learned that freedom was a central issue in the war and assumed that with freedom would come equality and economic progress. With the surrender of Japan in August 1945, then, India was in a turmoil of expectations. During the war key figures in the leadership of the nationalist Congress had been jailed while their rivals, members of the secessionist Muslim League – a party of limited political influence even in predominately Muslim areas before the war – had increased its grassroots appeal. Thus, by the end of 1945, a degree of separation and self-determination on the part of at least some of India’s tens of millions of Muslims had become a major and inescapable political assumption. “Partition” had entered the political vocabulary but what, exactly, did it entail? No one yet knew. Besides changes in India’s political topography, the war had changed the British political scene. To universal astonishment, the British Labour
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Party had won the national elections of July 1945. Not only was Labour more sympathetic to Indian independence than its Conservative predecessor, it was now faced with ruling over a homeland that was verging, as we have seen in Chapter 1, on economic ruin. More than any illusions about staying on in India as rulers – an impossibility in any case – Britain’s new governors became preoccupied with evacuating as expediently as possible. By 1946 the British had resigned themselves to Indian independence in the very near future. This stimulated the elevated expectation of Indians and especially the level of political contestation that had been both incubated and suppressed during the war. Under mounting pressure both at home and in India itself, feverish attempts by the British government to establish a smooth handover got nowhere; their solutions for powersharing between Congress and the Muslim League fell on stony ground while, throughout the country, political agitation and even class conflict increased. To give but few examples of this agitation and conflict: in 1946 there was a naval mutiny among sailors of the Royal Indian Navy as well as serious police mutinies; in the same year there were 1,629 industrial disputes involving almost two million workers; in Bengal, where the British had first established their supremacy two centuries earlier, there were communal killings in August 1946; in Calcutta, the capital of Bengal, “the worst riots between Hindus and Muslims ever remembered in India broke out.”3 In the next years riot zones were declared not only in the cities of Delhi, Bombay, Karachi, and Quetta but in towns right across the country – although more in the north than the south. The motives for riots varied from place to place; in late 1946 in northern Bengal there were uprisings against Hindu landlords by Muslim tenants, and between 1946 and 1951 there were land seizures in the feudal state of Hyderabad. In Travancore in Kerala, where communists led attacks on big landlords, 800 demonstrators were killed. Punjab, the breadbasket of India, the dense population of which comprised Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, became the epicentre of violence. In early 1947 violence erupted in Lahore, Amritsar, and in the villages throughout the province. Worse was to come at the midnight hour of independence, as we shall see. Together with other outbreaks of violence, often directed against their rule, these confrontations reinforced the British view that delay in granting India independence would be unbearably costly. On 3 June 1947, less than two years after the war in Asia had ended, Indians learned for the first time that the British Raj would be partitioned
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– divided, in fact, into two, later three, political entities. Two months later, as imperial power continued to decompose, a British judge, with no previous familiarity with India at all, was hustled in and out of India to settle the question the division of the raj into separate, religiously based spheres. Sequestered in a chamber with no opportunity to actually visit the lands that he was dividing, and often using inaccurate information, the judge demarcated frontiers that would trifurcate the country, two parts of which, separated by a thousand miles, were to be the homes of very culturally distinct Muslim populations. Neither Indians nor Pakistanis would know where the border actually existed until after partition; nor could anyone predict the horrific consequences, either in the long or short term, of the judge’s lucubrate pencillings. Once again, but not for the last time in history, it was the West that, behind closed doors and in secret, designed the rest. The division of Africa in the late nineteenth century had been known as “the Scramble”; the division of the Ottoman empire that we shall see below was callous but nameless, while the vivisection of South Asia was to become known as “the Partition.” The process of hasty and ill-conceived retreat against a background of semi-starvation and incipient civil war, and with the British hastily washing their hands of any responsibility for the lives of South Asians, was dignified in the annals of imperial history by the term “transfer of power.” The outcome of the transfer from the British to the Congress Party of India and the Muslim League of Pakistan was, in terms of political geography, just the opposite of the accession to power of the Communist Party in China in 1949; in China historic territory was regained, in India it was lost; in China a revolutionary party bent on the extirpation of owners of land and capital came to power; in India power was consolidated by a bourgeois party determined to protect landlords, merchants, and industrialists. And in both countries, although as a consequence of different intentions, the rural masses were sacrificed. partition and exodus
On the eve of Indian and Pakistani independence, thus, based on hasty and half-baked British cartographical improvisations that divided British India into three elements under two hostile governments, millions of Muslim Indians migrated westwards towards the newly created Muslim state of Pakistan, and tens of thousands of Hindu and Sikh Indians trekked eastwards, out of Pakistan, to India. This move was
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stimulated by the pull of a search for a promised land and by the push of forms of religious hatred cooked up by fanatics and politicians on both sides. It was the greatest mass migration in history. “Ten million refugees were on the move, by foot, by bullock cart, and by train, sometimes travelling under army escort, at other times trusting to fate and their respective gods. Jawaharlal Nehru flew over one refugee convoy that had 100,000 people and stretched for ten miles. It was travelling from Jalandhar to Lahore, and had to pass through Amritsar, where there were 70,000 refugees from West Punjab ‘in an excited state.’ Nehru suggested bulldozing a road around the town, so that the two convoys would not meet.”4 In the great exodus tens of thousands were assaulted by gangs and killed as they fled across borders, and enmities were created that were to last into the twenty-first century. Even by the standards of the violent twentieth century, the Partition of India is remembered for its carnage, both for its scale – which may have involved the deaths of half a million to one million men, women and children – and for its seemingly indiscriminate callousness. Individual killings, especially in the most ferociously contested province of Punjab, were frequently accompanied by disfiguration, dismemberment, and the rape of women from one community by men from another. Muslims, Sikhs, and Hindus suffered equally as victims and can equally be blamed for carrying out the murders and assault.5 The British bad faith that led to the Balkanization of India was compounded by the question of Kashmir, the northern province from which Nehru had come. Kashmir was over 75 per cent Muslim in population, and, since it was contiguous with Pakistan, had logic ruled, it would have been made a Pakistani province. Although it was assumed that it should join Pakistan, its ruler, the Hindu Hari Singh, hesitated. When guerrillas from Pakistan infiltrated the frontiers, Hari Singh invited the Indian army to secure his patrimony. The guerrillas were dispersed and Kashmir was claimed by India. For the new rulers of Pakistan this was an outrage. So, in the very first moments of its life, independent India had taken an unwilling hostage. A problem was thereby created that was to be the cause of three wars between India and Pakistan and was to undermine any claims the Indians might have to being above the sordid business of territorial engrossment. Kashmir thus became India’s Tibet.
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At independence the economy of India resembled that of China in that it was overwhelmingly rural and agricultural. Just as most of China’s peasants recalled the poverty and terror associated with warlordism and Japanese invasion, most of India’s were haunted by the memory of famine and dearth. Although the two major states of Asia had much in common in the run-up to independence, they diverged sharply in the years that followed. Pre-independence [i.e., pre-1947] India and pre-liberation China [i.e., pre-1949] were both near the bottom of the international system. Indian life expectancy in 1931 was around twenty-seven years, while a survey of rural China in 1929–31 yields calculations of a lifespan of 23.7 for females and 24.6 for males, probably a similar overall rate if urban areas are added. The Chinese then entered a period of Japanese occupation and civil war, more devastating than anything experienced in India during the same time … The pre-1949 Chinese lifespan was thirty-five years, compared to just around thirty-two years in India in 1941, still roughly comparable. Yet Indian life expectancy four years after independence, in 1951, was still only 32.1 while a similar postliberation period, as of 1953, found China with a lifespan of 40.3.6 A further portrait of India’s economy on the threshold of independence provides us with a closer view of rural conditions and reminds us that under the British, although impressive infrastructural developments (especially in the form of railways and canals) had been completed, rural life and industrial development was virtually stagnant. Nearly 85 per cent of the people lived in villages and derived their livelihoods from agriculture and related pursuits using traditional, low productivity techniques. Fertilizers and other modern inputs, which are the key to high productivity, were hardly in use; and irrigation facilities were available only for about one-sixth of the area. Industries employed less than a tenth of the labour force, the great bulk of them in traditional cottage and small-scale processing activities. Modern factory industry, employing some 3 million workers out of a total of 140 million, was also dominated by jute and cotton manufactures and other agriculture-based industries. While there
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were factories producing steel, cement, paper, basic chemicals and light engineering products, their range of output and contribution to total output was quite limited. Capital formation (around 6 per cent of NDP) was inadequate to bring about rapid improvement in per capita income which was about one-twentieth of the level attained in developing countries. The average availability of food was not only deficient in quantity and quality but, as recurrent famines underscored so painfully, also precarious. Illiteracy was a high 84 per cent and the majority (60 per cent) of children in the 6 to 11 age group did not attend school; mass communicable diseases (malaria, smallpox and cholera) were widespread and, in the absence of a good public health service and sanitation, mortality rates … were very high. The problems of poverty, ignorance and disease were aggravated by the unequal distribution of resources between groups and regions.7 So much for what imperial promoters once referred to as the incalculable benefits of British rule. Why had the Indian economy stagnated even as capitalist growth expanded universally in the first decades of the twentieth century? The explanation is not far to seek. The drain of surplus from backward countries to advanced ones has continued throughout the history of capitalism. The British transmitted wealth from India in the form of a vampiric levy known as “home charges,” that is, the fees paid by the Indians for having been colonized. By 1933 home charges had risen to 27 per cent of public expenditure. While the high level of home charges contributed to a foreign exchange surplus, this surplus was being deposited in Britain and was therefore lost to investment in India. When India became independent the Indian foreign reserves that remained in London were returned. Further, the British also spent the money they raised by taxes and other means in India on security, that is, in maintaining a huge “Indian” army, mainly recruited from the areas that were later to become Pakistan. This army included not only the Indian and British troops that were garrisoned in India but also British troops in Britain as well as overseas.8 In World War II the largely British-officered Indian army had fought the Japanese in Asia and the Germans in North Africa and Europe. Once the war had ended and the loss of India became inevitable, the loss of the Indian army meant the end of British domination on mainland Asia.
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In terms of economic development, independent India moved forward at an apparently blameless pace, maintaining a comfortable distance from both the communism of the Soviet Union and China and laissezfaire capitalism advocated by many Western advisors. Always, the Indian bourgeoisie remained firmly in control, using the threat of the withdrawal of their capital to remind the politicians and state managers that any program for India’s economic future would have to satisfy their perceived needs. Congress was for them the necessary means of maintaining control of a state that, in the immediate aftermath of World War II, was challenged by widespread industrial and political militancy. Thus India industrialized, not like China, under the direction of the state, but rather through the state yet under the actual control of its own massively powerful indigenous capitalists. It was these, the “kings of industry” as Nehru had called them, who drew up India’s economic agenda simultaneously in the interests of the nation and the ruling elite, not excluding themselves. Their point man in the government of Nehru was the Gujarati strongman, V.B. Patel, the deputy prime minister and main fund raiser and organizer of Congress, who fought consistently to weaken the radical influence of India’s main labour organizations and to increase the influence of big business. In the view of the kings of industry, a strong state role in the economy was consistent with assuring their own monopolies within the domestic economy. The state would thus provide a trellis of economic regulations up which certain Indian industries might climb. “From the very earliest discussions of Indian industrial planning, the domestic capitalist class was given every assurance that the new state would be singularly committed to using public monies as a means of accelerating the development of private industry.”9 And climb they did. In spite of Nehru’s claims that he was a socialist and, therefore by implication, the economy of India was socialist, it was not. In fact, it might be more accurately called “state capitalist,” inasmuch as the state and the big capitalists existed in a symbiotic but not equal relationship. Thus, while in the case of South Korea we may speak of “state-led industrial policy,” in India we must acknowledge that the role of the state was, from the very beginning in 1947, subordinate to capital. Licensing, which protected the monopolies of domestic capital, was a major feature of the Indian economy as presided over by the Nehrus; it
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was, in fact, the essence of “the Permit Raj.” Omniscient licenses therefore regulated not only how much could be invested and where, but how much could be produced and even with what technology. Investment licenses, requiring up to eighty permissions, were necessary before an industry could be set up. At the same time, despite claims about freedom and equality, the leaders of Congress seemed unable to find a way out of the world of landlordism, caste and gender oppression, and grinding poverty that immobilized the mass of the Indian people. Indian agriculture was unreformed; it had thus nothing in common with that of China, or, indeed, with other Asian imitators of the Soviet Union, such as North Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, or even Japan. Largely unreformed, thus, in spite of limited initiatives taken by Nehru, peasants continued to live in immobile and illiterate poverty, squeezed not by the state, as in China, but by landlords and moneylenders. There were exceptions to this pattern where rich peasants invested in land and increased production and profit, but for the most part those involved in agriculture were among the most wretched of the adults of the Indian world. The millions of child labourers were possibly even worse off. The “Green Revolution” of the late 1960s did little to ameliorate the intolerable poverty of the majority; it did help enrich a range of wealthy farmers and landlords, most of whom were from the huge middle caste of peasants. India was thus moving in the exactly the opposite direction to Vietnam in precisely the same period. On the macroeconomic, national scale significant change was evident within the first decade of independence. In one survey of Indian economy and society published at the end of the 1960s, a number of improvements are thus evident. First, the Indian economy had expanded much faster than in the previous colonial period. In the last half century of colonial rule, national income had grown at 0.7 per cent per year; from 1948 to 1969 it grew by 3.3 per cent per year. This growth, in fact, became the Plimsoll Line of economic growth and was known, with a trace of condescension, as the “the Hindu Rate of Growth.” As the Indian government now spent more on research and technological transfer than the colonial government had, independent India benefited from the acceleration of postwar technological innovation. The most spectacular improvements were a result of the more extensive use of antibiotics and DDT, which had cut mortality, and the adoption of new kinds of seeds, which resulted in increased farm incomes.
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The final factors that explain this more rapid economic growth relate to the changes that were sweeping the global economy generally, namely, more foreign trade and, as a consequence of the politics of development in the West, more aid. And finally, there was accelerated population growth that translated into a growth in output. Life expectancy rose from thirty years to fifty: the caps of medievalism and colonialism, it now became apparent, had stolen life away. In sum, the government that Nehru led, and the India that he in large part fashioned, subscribed to the idea of high levels of dirigisme, and, in common with many of the states of Asia (and Latin America), followed the doctrines of import substitution industrialization (ISI). Even before China, in 1951 India launched its first Five Year Plan, taking a page from the Soviet manual of rapid industrialization by privileging heavy industry over the production of consumer goods. Its markets, like those of other economies that were statist, were likewise closed to all but the most necessary imports, with the result that a huge range of Indian consumer goods, from cars to ceramics, continued to be Indian-made. And always, from first to last, and in spite of apparent dirigisme and fiveyear plans, launched one after another with diminishing fanfare until the last trailed off into the sunset in the 1980s, unheralded, the same class remained dominant while the monopolies that it controlled grabbed an increasingly large share of the economy. foreign affairs
Like China after 1949, upon independence, India turned to the Soviet Union for planning inspiration, military aid, and diplomatic support. Under Nehru (r. 1947–64) and, later, his daughter, Indira (r. 1966–84), therefore, relations with the Soviet Union were normally warm and continued to be cordial until the Soviet Union finally voted itself out of existence. With China, they were at first cordial and then declined to calamitous, reaching the point of a war between the two countries in October 1962 over disputed territory in the Himalayas. Poorly armed and fighting in the punishing environment of the world’s highest mountains, after a few skirmishes the army of India was sent reeling backward in defeat. There was talk in India of the Chinese actually emerging onto the plains. This military defeat was a source of great humiliation for both Nehru, who had put so much store in relations between the great Asian neighbours, as well as for India. In fact, it was the most decided failure in his fifteen years as prime minister and caused him great disillusionment
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regarding the possibility of Third World solidarity and non-alignment. Fear of China led India to hastily seek improved relations with the United States, which provided the Indian army with the much-needed arms it required at a time when the Soviet Union sat on the fence. Instrumental in this rapprochement was the American ambassador, John Kenneth Galbraith, not only one of the brightest lights in the US economics profession, but a figure of unusual broadmindedness and savoir faire. With the United States, after all, relations were normally cool. Indians of the elite tended to despise Americans as being uncouth and materialistic. Here they were, unconsciously or not, imitating the prejudices of the British ruling class, many whose values, educational, and military especially, they continued to reproduce. Many Americans, in turn, detested Nehru for his neutralism and claimed that he was a communist. Because the Americans distrusted the Indians, from the time of the Pakistani military strongman Ayub Khan (r. 1958–69), as we shall see in the next chapter, they turned to the various khaki claudillos on India’s northwest frontier and lavished upon them largess, especially in the form of stockpiles of arms. This guaranteed a permanent arms race on the frontiers of India and Pakistan. But for the Pakistani military, American aid was manna from heaven; for it allowed them to parade as India’s equals. That they were not was shown in 1971 when they were unable to crush the secessionist movement that led to the break-up of Pakistan and the birth of Bangladesh. politics : gandhistan
India was ruled by Jawaharlal Nehru, his descendants, and their colleagues from independence until 1996 and then again from 2004 until the present (2011). Given the ineradicable role of the Nehrus, in fact, it could easily be argued that Congress was not a real party at all; rather, it was a coalition that had coagulated around a family oligarchy. Having successfully delivered independence to India, this party became as ideologically slippery as any conventional class-based Western political party, and certainly as willing to accept profound levels of corruption. In this light, India can be seen as a hereditary republic like North Korea or Syria, or as Egypt or Iraq might have been, although, of course, hardly a dictatorship; for alongside and often competing with the Nehrus, we see some of the world’s most durable communist parties plus a clamorous, roiling, and mutating range of religious, ethnic/tribal, and caste-based alliances, all eager for their share of the spoils of government.
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Let us look back to consider the founder of the Nehru clan. It is easy to forget that under Nehru India was humiliated by China and that the non-alignment that he professed was essentially a non-starter. And it is easy to remember, on the other hand, why Jawahalal Nehru was so widely admired in his own time and how he has come to be regarded with almost unalloyed affection ever since. By any standards he was remarkable for his ideals, which were those of a reforming patrician socialist of the British Fabian variety, and for his attempts, however ultimately unsuccessful, to create for India a leading role as an nonaligned Third World state, keeping at arm’s length from both the US-led West and the Soviet-Chinese East. Nor is it difficult to see why a number of American leaders and a large part of the US press disliked and distrusted him. Independent Third World leaders with confident and urbane bourgeois manners, articulate and voluble in English, and with no taste for deference in spite of the poverty of their countries, were a rarity. Most of those who flirted with the Soviet Union and its allies, or showed the slightest interest in any form of socialism, both indulgences of Nehru, indeed met sticky ends. Yet, in spite of the dangerous politics that he espoused, there is no doubt of Nehru’s political steadfastness and his sincerity. In his own words: “I must freely confess that I am a socialist and a republican and am no believer in kings and princes, or in the order which produces the modern kings of industry, who have greater power over the lives and fortunes of men than even kings of old, and whose methods are as predatory as those of the old feudal aristocracy.”10 The same political commitment is reflected in the preamble to the Indian Constitution, enacted in 1949 under Nehru’s guidance, which begins, “WE, THE PEOPLE OF INDIA, having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a SOVEREIGN SOCIALIST SECULAR DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC.” Yet the undoing of Nehru was the work of the Chinese, whom he had cultivated, not the Americans, whom he had shunned. The Chinese invasion of India’s Himalayan territories, and their easy defeat of the Indian armies, caused unendurable shock. It drove him into the arms of Washington in search of the modern arms and mortally wounded the already fragile ideas of Non-Alignment and of Third World solidarity. Thus it was that he died in office in May 1964 and was succeeded after a brief intermission by his daughter, Indira Gandhi.11 Indira, educated in Switzerland and England, was a fully paid-up member of the Indian bourgeoisie. Like her father, she was committed to a kind of statism within the limits imposed by the owners of capital.
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Having split with the ruling clique of the Congress Party in 1969, in 1971 she won an overwhelming personal electoral victory and became the second member of the Nehru family to hold the reins of power. In August 1971 Indira’s government signed a Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation with the Soviet Union, and between 1972 and 1975 she carried out a series of nationalizations, at the same time tightening her grip on the Indian political process. Unlike her father, she had no taste for compromise and a decided taste for authoritarianism; so, instead of acquiring any kind of broad political base, she was insulated from the electorate by her cronies and her family. Under these circumstances, the fortunes of her eldest son, Sanjay, a wastrel with few real abilities and a taste for conspiracy and self-aggrandizement, rose meteorically to the point that it is possible to speak of the mother and son, Indira-Sanjay, regime. By 1974 Indira Gandhi’s popularity was sinking, and in June 1975 the Allahbad High Court found her guilty of electoral malpractice. In reply, she declared a state of emergency, neutralizing the constitution and imprisoning over 100,000 people without trial. At this point, between 1975 and 1977, with 400 million living on the knife-edge of starvation and its democratic annulled, India seemed fated to follow Brazil along a road of mass destitution and overcrowded prisons. Then, assuming that she had regained control over her rivals, Indira called an election. She was thrown out of office. “In voting Mrs Gandhi out in 1977, Indians showed that while they can put up with much economic injustice, they would not tolerate tyranny. In accepting defeat gracefully, Mrs Gandhi confirmed that the norms of democratic transition of power had been internalized at the highest levels of India’s political elite.” 12 Although one may doubt whether “putting up with” economic justice satisfactorily explains the response of the impoverished majority, it seems likely that India’s large middle class, informed by its remarkably free press, had no taste at all for dictatorship. Indira’s successor, Morarji Desai, a barely focused octogenarian, ruled briefly and chaotically. Indira herself was back after the elections in early 1980. Her autumnal years were hardly peaceful. Inflamed by her sending the Indian army to occupy their Golden Temple in Amritsar, a sect of radical Sikhs organized her assassination. In August 1984 she was gunned down by two of her own security guards. In response there was a pogrom against the Sikhs; at least 3,000 died and another 25,000 were left homeless. Vivek Chibber provides an epitaph for the IndiraSanjay decade.
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A … strategy Indira and Sanjay Gandhi used was to intervene in the normal practices of promotion and circulation of top-level bureaucrats, so that the plum posts and perquisites went to those most loyal to them personally … This was a change of momentous consequences for Indian political development. Internal conspiracy, Byzantine intrigues, shifting alliances – all this had always been a staple of Congress internal politics, even in the time of Nehru … But the politicization of the bureaucracy was an innovation for which Indira and Sanjay could take all the credit. The natural consequence of such interference was a drastic demoralization of top level bureaucrats, since, under this dispensation, the criterion on which decisions were assessed was no longer their conformity to rules but the fidelity to the ruling family … [I]t is impossible to deny that the changes the Indira-Sanjay regime wrought set into motion a process whose full implications have yet to be realized.13 Because Sanjay accidentally killed himself, Indira was succeeded by her second son, Rajiv (1944–1991) who was elected as prime minister as a “sympathy wave” washed over the country. His huge majority “was the last hurrah of a single-party majority governments, Indira Gandhi’s posthumous gift to party and country.”14 The grand old party of Indian nationalism would never again rule alone; when it returned it would need more than a little help from its friends who represented a rainbow of regions, castes, and classes. But Rajiv, too, was assassinated, not by Sikh men from the north with guns but by a Tamil woman from Sri Lanka to the south, with a bomb, in protest against the involvement of the Indian army in the civil war in her homeland. Dynastic rule now looked like it had exhausted itself, although behind the scenes, Sonia, Rajiv’s Italian wife, like some foreign-born infanta in absolutist Europe, continued to incubate dynastic dreams. Meanwhile Nehru’s socialist India was to continue down the road to neoliberal transformation almost in tandem with that of another socialist state, China. the road to liberalization
This world of the “development state” – characterized by the “Hindu Rate of Growth” – gradually dissolved under regimes of liberalization that were launched from 1984 by Rajiv Gandhi. Rajiv, like his mother and brother, depended on patronage rather than merit and was
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surrounded and advised by cronies from the private sector at whose prompting he kicked off a process of liberalization. His model was, ostensibly at least, Japan, although neither the Indian economy nor Indian politics had anything in common with the leading East Asian capitalist state. In early 1985 the first moves were made towards delicensing, removing restrictions on the import of foreign technology and lowering tariff barriers. The older strategy of import substitution industrialization (ISI) was attacked by the prime minister himself, on the advice of the World Bank. In early 1986 new measures were introduced that aimed at opening up India’s economy to the forces of global trade and finance. These measures included the reduction of subsidies on petroleum, petroleum products, food, and fertilizer. The Indian business press applauded. “Towards a New Era,” cheered the Times of India. The Wall Street Journal was pleased to refer to Rajiv as “Rajiv Reagan,” naming him after the icon of neo-conservative America. But opposition to Rajiv’s neoliberal economic strategies soon mounted. The needs of the poor were being sacrificed, their spokesmen argued. Nationwide protest followed with the government being accused of being pro-rich and anti-poor. Rajiv backed down and began to make compromises. The further liberalization of the economy was now stalled. In the 1980s India’s per annum rate of GDP growth had increased to around 5.6 per cent. There it stayed, as we shall see, until 2003 when it began to improve again. By the end of the first quarter of 2006 it had leaped up to 9.3 per cent. Here was a sign taken as a wonderful proof of the new doctrine. The really significant changes to the Indian economy took place from 1991. In that year there had been a run on foreign exchange reserves that forced India to turn to the IMF and the World Bank for bail-out loans. Liberalization of the economy in the form of the reduction of trade protection – Indian protectionism being at a level comparable with the Soviet Union – and the abandonment of ISI headed the list of conditions demanded. In 1991 Congress was, as usual, in power, but in a minority government, and the prime minister was Rajiv’s successor, Narasimha Rao (r. 1991–96). The minister of finance was Manmohan Singh, a former World Bank economist, who was later to refer to Rao as “the father of India’s economic reforms.” Whereas Rajiv had de-licensed a few industries, the Rao government de-licensed all but a few; tariffs were lowered, the rules for foreign investment and ownership were slackened and corporate taxes were lowered. India’s economy had finally entered a new era. Praise from economic
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journalists and officials from Western institutions was intoxicating. Manmohan Singh’s hour would soon toll. the rise and demise of the bjp
Why had this happened under Rao and not under Rajiv, and whence did it draw it necessary support? The answer to the first part of the question is that politics had changed. Whereas before 1990 Indian politics had been “bi-polar,” that is, a contest between Congress, the normal party of government on the one side and all of its rivals on the other, after 1990 politics had become triangular. Radhika Desai has traced this change to the decisive effects of the Green Revolution of the late 1960s and to the phenomenal rise of Hindu-chauvinism, in the form of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).15 One potent political event, above all else, had served as a catalyst: the movement that aimed at the destruction of the Babri mosque in Ayodha that, the BJP’s propagandists alleged, had been built over a sacred Hindu shrine. This movement first surfaced in 1990 and completed its work, the destruction of the mosque, in 1992. This provocative desecration was part of a campaign to establish a fundamentalist political party that would serve to create a new, hegemonic, Hindu India. The BJP was explicitly antagonistic towards Muslims but offended a wide range of Indians of all political and religious persuasions. In the lower house of parliament the BJP had had only two seats in 1984–89, against 415 held by Congress. From 1991 it had 120, against between 220 and 232 for Congress. The effect of this was to push other parties, especially those on the left but also those supporting minority groups, into coalitions on the side of Congress, their previous antagonist. These parties disliked Congress but they despised the Hindu fundamentalists. So when the Rao government moved in the direction of liberalizing the Indian economy, they did not vote against it. As for the BJP, its members were divided. The second part of the question is answered by Jayati Ghosh, who makes the point that the neoliberal reform process could not have taken place without the support extended to it by various elements of the domestic large capitalist class, along with other social groups with substantial political voice, such as the middle class.16 Yet, even those elements of big business that had earlier benefited from state controls became persuaded that it would do better without state controls, while rich farmers saw that they might benefit from
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exporting to the international market. Thus, both capitalists who had previously limited themselves to the domestic market and those who had worked within the international marketplace, together with Indians from outside the country (the Indian equivalent to the diaspora Chinese whom we have seen in the previous chapter), felt that a bonfire of controls would benefit them. In 1997, to the shock of many secular and non-fundamentalist Indians – Muslims, communists, Congress liberals, and Hindus alike – the BJP was elected to power. Its overriding goal was to consolidate and expand its appeal and to extend support for its sectarian ideology, Hindutva (“Hindu-ness”). Its interest in neoliberal reform was less urgent than that under the preceding Congress government, although it did not reverse any of the changes that Rao and Singh had initiated and boasted of India’s liberalized future. “India Shining” became its slogan. But the BJP, as much through the willingness of some of its members to use violence against Muslims as due to its economic policies, had alienated the electorate, especially its poorer members. In May 2003 it was defeated at the polls and a Congress-led coalition known as the “National Democratic Alliance” was returned. The new prime minister was the same Manmohan Singh, the World Bank servant who had been Rao’s minister of finance. It was clear from the beginning that Singh intended to continue liberalizing the economy of India, but the extent that this would be possible was another question. malls and slums
Yet, we might ask, what had been the actual effects of liberalization over the two decades since it had first been introduced by Rajiv Gandhi? The good news is that between 1980 and 2002 the Indian economy grew at 6 per cent per year and from 2002 to 2006 at 7.5 per cent per year. The middle class, at least by one definition, grew to 250 million. At the same time, population growth slowed from 2.2 to 1.7 per cent. In large part because of this population growth, per capita income has increased from $1,178 to $3,051 per year since 1980. The secret to India’s success has been attributed to the policy of providing for the domestic market rather than for exports. And then the other news: first of all, in the heavy and light industry sectors of the economy there has been little significant growth; the “Hindu rate” (3.5 per cent) was not surpassed in the primary sector, while growth in the secondary sector was little different over the whole
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period 1981–2000. It was in the tertiary, services, sector that dynamism was to be found. “India Shining” therefore referred not to shiny industrial goods but to the shine associated with international call centres and IT parks in places like Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Pune and, of course, to the shopping malls, well patrolled by security guards to keep the inquisitive poor at bay. The entire IT sector employed only 1.3 million people out of a total workforce of more than 400 million. At the same time, there were very low rates of employment generation, half the level of the period of the “Hindu rate” and well below the rate of growth of the rural population. The quality of employment worsened with the number of people in full-time work decreasing while those in part-time work increased. Agricultural employment showed the sharpest deterioration of all: “rural employment in the period 1993–94 to 1999–2000 grew at the very low annual rate of less than 0.6 per cent … lower than any previous period in post-Independence history, and well below (only one-third) the rate of growth of rural population.” In urban India “the deceleration and even decline in organized sector employment was one of the more disturbing features of the period after 1990.”17 Indian growth, then, may remain more illusory, or at least more limited, than is at first apparent. Ghosh also explains this growth and its limits: “the role of the state [has] remained crucial, since it was the state that determined the contours of tax reductions, deregulation and other policies that allowed for economic growth based on a relatively small and dominant urban section of the population. The explosion in consumption by the upper quintile of the population … fed this growth, and meant that it involved increased inequality, both across regions of India and within regions across different economic and social categories. There was also a widening gap between incomes in agriculture and non-agriculture.”18 The crisis in the agricultural sector has resulted in over a hundred thousand suicides by farmers over the past decade. So, in spite of claims of wondrous economic growth, there remains in India, according to Amit Bhaduri a population of 303 million in “utter misery.” “Nearly half of Indian children under six years suffer from under-weight and malnutrition, nearly 80 per cent from anaemia, while some 40 per cent of Indian adults suffer from chronic energy deficit … [M]ore than three in four Indians do not have a daily income of $2.”19 A small part of Indian society has, nonetheless, prospered fantastically. According to Forbes, the magazine of the rich and wannabe rich, in 2007 India had the distinction of having forty billionaires; Japan had
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only twenty-four, China seventeen, and France fourteen. “The combined wealth of Indian billionaires increased from $106 to $170 billion in a single year.”20 Here we have an unsurprising explosion in consumption, one of the more egregious elements being the interest in wine drinking, which was never a compulsion of the Indian middle class. A New York Times article in August 2007 noted that, “while more than a third of all Indians live on less than $1 a day, the country’s nose for wine, an outgrowth of new wealth and world travel among India’s swelling ranks of the rich, can be discerned in the wine clubs sprouting across India’s new-money citadels, the wine tours of the young Indian vineyards and the wider variety of wines now available at upmarket restaurants.” “Thus India is said to be poised to become a power in the 21st century, with the largest number of homeless, undernourished, illiterate children coexisting with billionaires created by … rapid growth.”21
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7 Storms over Afpak: Permanent War in Pakistan and Afghanistan The general [Gen. Stanley McChrystal] has reportedly long thought of Pakistan and Afghanistan as a single battlefield, which means that he was a premature adherent to the idea of an Af-Pak – that is, expanded war. Tom Englehardt, “How the Most Powerful Nation Disabled Itself” Remember my words: if the ISI is not with you and Pakistan is not with you, … you will lose Afghanistan. President Musharraf qtd. in Imtaz Gul, The Most Dangerous Place By now, almost all the likely outcomes of US strategy in Afghanistan are bad ones. Anatol Lieven, “How the Afghan Counterinsurgency Threatens Pakistan”
introduction
Pakistan and Afghanistan stand at the crossroads of the Middle East, Central, East, and South Asia with Iran to the west, the newly independent, formerly Soviet, sovereign republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan to the north, and just beyond them, Russia, Tibet, and Xianjiang to the north and east, and India to the south.1 While several of the frontiers of Central Asia are imperial creations, drawn up by the British and the Russians, others embracing Tibet and Xianjiang represent a much older expansionism. Most of the newly independent republics are less than two decades old, having been born after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991. In 1996 China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan formed a multilateral partnership called the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
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(SCO), a source of some concern for those who would play a new Great Game in the neighbourhood.2 The territory of Pakistan before its creation in August 1947 comprised several distinct elements. At its centre was the Indus and the northwest, the lands of the Harappan city states, which existed in the second and third millennia BCE and were the very hearth of Indian civilization. Here the rich and well-irrigated agricultural heartlands of Punjab and the Sind, hugging the Indus like Upper Egypt cradled the Nile, were, like Egypt, renowned for cotton production. This area had been conquered by the Mughals in 1590, and, under them, the region had become increasingly commercialized. The second element was peripheral, comprising the poorer hinterlands of Baluchistan and what the British called “the Northwest Frontier Province” (NWFP) and “the Federally Administered Tribal Areas” (FATA). The former was mostly desert, the latter, arid and mountainous.3 A quite distinctive element in the newly conjured Pakistan in 1947 was East Bengal, at the other extreme of India and torn from its side in the partition. Its population was more consistently South Asian and less Middle Eastern than that of West Pakistan, although it became part of the Muslim world at the beginning of the second millennium of the common era. Here Islam was at the very end of its continental tether and, as a consequence of being on the frontier, was more strongly influenced by Hinduism. The Bengali part of Pakistan was slightly more populous than West Pakistan and had little in common with it, other than religion. Yet, Islam has remained an ideology of inestimable potency in the history and politics of the India and Pakistan, in the past as now. In the view of Stephen Cohen, “No question is more contentious, or of more contemporary political relevance, than that of how Islam spread within South Asia. The entire state of Pakistan rests on certain interpretations of that expansion.”4 In both Punjab and Sind, which are the most populous and richest parts of West Pakistan that the British had sustained and expanded on the basis of an extensive network of irrigation canals, there existed a class of rich peasants and landlords (zamindars) and a mass of poor, tenureless sharecroppers and labourers. On the other hand, both of these provinces saw their other opportunities shrink. “Prior to the [British] annexation [in 1843], Sind was a participant in a wide-ranging system of interregional and international trade. Under British rule, its function was increasingly reduced.”5
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Much of the area that was to become Pakistan was thus agriculturally highly productive but, in comparison to India, quite devoid of modern urban centres and trade and industry. Only a small, educated, modernist, middle class emerged there. The most progressive capitalists were in fact the Muslim emigrants (muhajirs) who moved there from India after Pakistan’s independence in 1947. The Pakistan that was created as the last act of a dying colonialism in 1947 was gone by the end of 1971. It was designed in haste and its people were abandoned to their fate by their erstwhile British rulers in the postwar scramble to decolonize. While it existed, it was dominated by West Pakistani Punjabis and Sindhis, although the majority of its people, who were Bengalis, lived in the East. It was also from the East, and especially from the export of jute, that most of the united Pakistan’s foreign currency earnings had come. After the civil war that divided them, East Pakistan became Bangladesh. The land of Afghanistan, the second subject in this chapter, has an extraordinary past by any standards. Its entry into world history came when it was incorporated as a province of the Persian Achaemenid Empire (550–330 BCE). After he had wrecked this empire in 331 BCE, Alexander the Great passed through Afghanistan on the way to the Indus where he arrived in 326. Thereafter, while it lacked the same kind of chronicling that allowed for coherent histories of its Persian and Indian neighbours to be written, Afghanistan, by whatever name, remained in the imaginations of both the rulers of Iran and those of India. Afghanistan’s permanent place in history was assured by the establishment of the dynasty of Babur, who, from Kabul, established the Indian Mughal Empire in 1526. Babur’s advent coincides with what was once regarded as the beginning of the modern period in Euro American history. Yet, we can hardly attach the term “modern” to the Mughal Empire; it was a perfect instance of an Asian empire of the un-modern kind, decidedly less affected by modernizing West Europe than the Ottoman Empire, for instance, and immeasurably more backward in terms of science, engineering, and agriculture than the Celestial Empire. By the 1520s it stretched from Kandahar, the urban matrix of the Pashtuns, to the Bay of Bengal on the boundaries of Southeast Asia. By the time India and Pakistan were created in 1947, a recognizable and unconquered, if hardly modern, state of Afghanistan had existed for half a century. Under the Pashtun king, Zahir Shah (r. 1933–73), Afghanistan slowly
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crept in the direction of the modern world. When Zahir was overthrown in a coup, the impetus behind Afghanistan’s slow forward march was dissipated as one lot of communists overthrew another and civil war ravaged the country. The destinies of Pakistan and Afghanistan have been intimately interwoven with those of both Persia and Muslim India. While Afghanistan was never incorporated within the Raj, the area of Pakistan from Baluchistan on the Persian frontier to the Indus became from the nineteenth century an integral part of British India. When the British drew up the frontier of their Indian empire, they included in it the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and the FATA that were historically part of Afghanistan. The Afghanis have never accepted this arrangement because it splintered the Pashtuns into several jurisdictions with three million Pashtuns in Pakistan’s FATA, twenty-eight million mainly in the NWFP, and fifteen million in Afghanistan as of 2008.6 pakistan
In British-ruled India the Muslim League had been formed in 1906 to argue for a separate Muslim political jurisdiction. Never becoming the voice of all Indian Muslims, neither did the league have the talent nor the following of Congress, although it often had the ear of certain of India’s British rulers. From 1930 there began to be talk about a separate Muslim political entity; this was to be called “Pakistan,” “the Land of the Pure.” The boundaries of this jurisdiction were vague and some thought they might even include Bombay (Mumbai). Increasingly, from the late 1930s, as we have seen in the previous chapter, the leaders of Congress and Muhammed Ali Jinnah (b. 1876), who dominated the Muslim League, were on a collision course. Yet, in spite of his undertakings with Muslim leaders, Jinnah was no more devout a Muslim than Nehru was a fastidious Hindu. Neither had, after all, imagined Israels on the banks of the Indus; both sought secular states that were both religiously and ethnically plural. Like Nehru, Jinnah spoke English virtually as a first language, and, like Nehru, he had received his legal training in England. In fact, he barely spoke Urdu, which he had no time to learn because he died on 1 September 1948.7 The last British viceroy of India, Lord Louis Mountbatten, who organized the partition of India and Pakistan, predicted that this arrangement would not last for more than twenty-five years. Still, this would not be a British problem.
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Pakistan, thus, was born at midnight on 14–15 August 1948, in the form of a sickly set of twins removed from Mother India by Caesarean section. Britain was its genitor, and Muslim League, led by Jinnah, its midwife. The western half of the new Pakistani state comprised Muslims of several distinct cultures (Punjabis, Sindhis, Baluchis, Pushtuns, and others, including seventeen major tribes in Baluchistan alone) linked by the common language of Urdu, closely related to Hindi and previously spoken in the Mughal court. Urdu was spoken as a first language by the muhajirs, the migrants who, in 1947, trekked into Pakistan from Uttar Pradesh, Gujerat, and Bombay but by few others; Bengalis spoke Bengali, Sindhis, Sindhi, and Punjabis, Punjabi. On the whole, the muhajirs spoke better English than the other newly minted Pakistanis; this gave them a significant advantage over their new countrymen. Pakistan’s emergence had been foreshadowed by communal strife between Hindus and Muslims immediately following the end of World War II. Almost immediately upon the separation of Pakistan from India there was cataclysm as Muslims trekked from India into Pakistan and Hindus and Sikhs fled in the opposite direction. Although there had been evidence of growing violence in places as far apart as Bengal and Kerala, the British did not foresee the bloodbath at partition; nor did the forces that they still commanded do anything to maintain order or prevent it. As they were to do in Palestine, they washed their hands of the whole calamity. It was against the background of this carnage that Nehru made his famous speech on the midnight of Indian independence. natal formations
Pakistan’s traumas came early. With 23 per cent of the total land mass of the Indian subcontinent and nearly 18 per cent of the population – or more precisely 68.6 million out of the 295.8 million in British India – the new state had less than 10 per cent of the industrial base in the two dominions and just a little over 7 per cent of the employment facilities … In 1947 Pakistan’s total industrial assets were worth only … approximately $112 million … of which the better part was owned
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by non-Muslims who had fled to India. Potentially self-sufficient only in foodgrains, Pakistan was the quintessential agrarian economy.8 According to the colonial division of labour, the lands within the borders of West Pakistan were to be principally agricultural, and their people, simple peasants and soldiers. Although in Mughal times Lahore in Punjab had been one of the largest cities of the empire, no attempts were made to develop the region industrially, as its single textile and its single sugar mill attested. Canals had been built across the region and ex- soldiers had been settled on them, but this was the limit of British investment. In the words of Imran Ali, “the colonial authority in the Pakistan area succeeded in retarding the very process that had expedited the transition to agricultural capitalism in Britain itself.”9 What Ali is arguing here is that the transition from feudalism through agricultural capitalism to industrial capitalism that was to take place in many parts of the developing world was stifled in India’s northwest. The outcome of imperialism here was, therefore, economic involution. In addition to its designer backwardness and to the crippling loss of the Hindu and Sikh merchants, Pakistan suffered from a lack of any form of political organization. In India, the influence and organization of Congress had spread downwards to the grassroots of society for several decades. In Pakistan, on the contrary, the Muslim League had developed little in the way of popular support. For this reason, it remained heavily dependent on the same vested interests that the British had supported – the zamindars, the religious leaders and the minor officials who had served under the British. It is the descendants of the latter group, the “salariat” who emerged at independence as the wielders of state power. In fact, after the assassination of Liaquat Ali Khan (r. 1947–51), several of them rose to the office of prime minister.10 Once in power, they upheld the British policy of patronizing the landowners and the religious leaders, blocking the way for popular participation in government until the rise of the military government of Ayub Khan (r. 1958–72) when they were pushed down into secondary roles. Always insecure in relation to India and determined to reclaim the lost province of Kashmir, Pakistan allocated as much as 70 per cent of its first budgets to defence. This guaranteed to the military a virtually unassailable role in the country’s future. Ruling over the new state and its counterpane of ethnicities, then, were four main social and political groups. The first of which were the feudal landholders, a mere 2,000 of whom owned 70 per cent of
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Pakistan’s cultivatable land. Four out of five seats in Pakistan’s national assembly were normally occupied by the feudal or their nominees. Many of the feudals had degrees from the leading universities in Britain and the United States. Alongside the feudal landlords in the countryside were the middle and rich peasants, such as the descendants of the veterans of Britain’s Indian Army who had been settled on empty land when the British extended the canal system through Punjab. Together these landlords and peasants were linked to form a mesh that held rural society in place. The landless peasants who worked on the land were bound as tenants and sharecroppers by a kind of feudal tenure. They have been described as shackled to their places of work. To suggest that the tenants and sharecroppers were voters in a democratic system would be, thus, ridiculous; normally, they voted as they were instructed – or else. In spite of regularly staged elections, Pakistani democracy has little in common with that of India. The second of the four groups comprised the industrial and commercial capitalists. Among them were the muhajirs (i.e., “migrants”). These formed only a small part of the population of Pakistan but were highly concentrated in Sind and especially in Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi, where over half of the population of twelve to fourteen million is muhajir. Among them were the oligarchy of twenty-two families who dominated commerce and industry. It has been estimated that these families owned 66 per cent of the total industrial assets, 70 per cent of insurance, and 80 per cent of banking. The third group was the bureaucracy, the “salariat.” This group ran, if they did not actually own, the country. One part of the salariat, the army, was in a class of its own, as we shall see. The civilian element of the bureaucracy, including the police, totalled 2.9 million people, a disproportionately large group of whom were senior managers. At the top of this group were the 800 leading civilian and police officials that ruled the 9,500 administrative districts that the country was divided into by the British. At their head were commissioners, possessing more absolute local power and privileges than British colonial officials ever had. The civilian officials, from the commissioners downwards, controlled all legal and tax records and worked in collaboration with the big landowners. The best rewarded of the civil servants were those involved in customs and excise, the most corrupt branch of the civil service. The bureaucratic elite, including leading army officers, comprised around 500 people.
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degeneration
Muhammed Ali Jinnah, the founding father of the country, was succeeded by Liaquat Ali Khan (b. 1905) who was assassinated in October 1951. In retrospect, his assassination was an ominous sign: “From 1954 to 1958 Pakistan’s political system degenerated into a farce,” writes Omar Noman.11 The farce was brought to an end by a charade: military rule was first established in a coup in 1958 authored by Ayub Khan (r. 1958–1969) whose origins were feudal; he came from one of the great landholding families of Punjab and clearly detested the muhajir commercial and industrial families. Suitably, he was educated at the British military college at Sandhurst, even in post-imperial times a hatchery for client martinets. Upon seizing power Ayub Khan snatched all the chief roles of state – chief of the general staff, prime minister, and president. He clung on to American coattails, enrolling Pakistan in the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO), an anti-Soviet alliance of Washington’s valets modelled on NATO. In return, Washington blessed his military dictatorship. It was from a base in friendly Pakistan that the notorious U-2 spy plane had been launched in the late 1950s – its mission to fly over and photograph Soviet military installations from high altitudes. We know about it because the Soviets shot it down. From 1958 the military occupied a role in Pakistani politics analogous to that of the Congress party in India; it was soon to become the normal, if not entirely admissible, centre of politics. But unlike India, Pakistan’s foreign policy commitments had nothing in common with India’s non-alignment; for Khan bound Pakistan to the United States in the kind of military clientage that was familiar in satrapies from Israel to Japan; Pakistan, Khan promised, would become America’s “most allied ally.” Of Ayub Khan’s contributions to the deterioration of any form of democracy in Pakistan, none were more important than his founding of the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, the ISI, to which I have averred at the opening of this chapter. The ISI fulfilled the same purpose as the FBI and the CIA in the United States; it was meant to spy both domestically and internationally and to carry out “wet” tasks according to instructions. But it was a knife that could turn in the hand of its wielder. Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto used it to harass his political opponents. The army chief of staff, General Zia ul-Haq, used it to overthrow Bhutto. The ISI grew hugely in the 1980s, as we shall see,
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as it became the main conduit for US and Saudi funds flowing into Afghanistan. Later it became the paymaster of the Taliban. Afghanistan’s war economy thus proved essential to the prosperity of Pakistan’s military caste. collapse
Khan’s years were Pakistan’s golden age, such as it was, and he narrowly missed being the last ruler of a united country. Even before he seized power, the Bengalis in East Pakistan had rioted against rule from West Pakistan; as early as 1952 they had mobilized against the imposition of Urdu as a national language. Two years later at the ballot box their nationalist party, the United Front, had devastated West Pakistan’s Muslim League. During the years of Ayub Khan’s dictatorship, the successor of the United Front, the Awami League, under Sheikh Mujib ur-Rahman (r. 1971–1975), had begun campaigning for outright independence. The people in Pakistan’s most populous province were convinced that their relationship with West Pakistan was a form of colonialism; they even used the term colonial exploitation. Not only was East Pakistan milked for the foreign exchange that its exports produced, but it was kept out of the circle of political power that was monopolized by politicians and soldiers from the East. Thus, although the Bengalis were the largest single ethnic group in Pakistan, no Bengali ever became head of government. The civilian and military elite of West Pakistan, according to Ayesha Siddiqa, saw the Bengalis, in spite of their being Muslims, as “ethnically inferior.”12 As the temperature in the east rose, Ayub Khan responded first with repression and then with despondency and resignation. In 1969, unable to blunder on any further, he handed over his usurped responsibilities to another general, Yahya Khan (b. 1917), who, emboldened by support from Washington, partly in the form of a substantial World Bank loan, decided to crush the Bengali dissidents. Troops were flown in to Dhaka, the East Bengal capital, and martial law was declared in the east. In the elections of December 1970, the secessionist Awami League won 288 of 300 seats in the East Pakistan legislature and an astonishing 167 out of the 300 seats in the National Assembly. This put Sheikh Mujib ur-Rahman in position to rule the whole country, a shocking prospect in the eyes of the political elites in West Pakistan. The opening of the National Assembly, scheduled for 1 March 1971, was postponed.
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Emergency talks were held in Dhaka. After meetings with the sheikh, the representatives from the west flew home, leaving the matter of who would rule unresolved. Behind them in the east was the large, mainly Punjabi, army of occupation, under the command of yet another general named Khan, in this case Tikka Khan. On 26 March Mujib ur-Rahman declared Pakistan dead and a new country, Bangladesh, born. Tikka Khan reacted with savagery, although obviously not without the encouragement of the leading political lights of West Pakistan. Chaos and civil war followed as his Punjabi and Baluchi soldiers slaughtered Bengali civilians. Students were massacred in the university and women in the markets. Millions fled across the border into India where the Indians armed Bengali guerrillas who returned to their new country. It was Partition all over again, yet this time Pakistan’s crisis was India’s opportunity. India and Pakistan had gone to war in 1947 at the time of Partition and again, for three weeks, in September 1965. In both cases, Kashmir was the apple of discord. On 23 November 1971, the third Indo- Pakistani war broke out when Indira Gandhi ordered Indian divisions to march into Bangladesh. The Indian soldiers outnumbered the Pakistanis about nine to one; as well, there were 100,000 armed Bengali guerrillas. Outgunned and even out-generalled, the Pakistani army was soon overwhelmed and on 15 December 1971 it surrendered. Some 100,000 Pakistani soldiers were now prisoners of the Indians. Mountbatten, the last British viceroy of India, had predicted that Pakistan would not last for twenty-five years; it had lasted for twenty-four. zulfikar ali bhutto
After the 1965 war with India had shredded the credibility of Ayub Khan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto formed his own political party, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP). The rhetoric of the PPP was the essence of 1960s populist Third Worldism: “Islam is our Faith, Democracy is our Polity, Socialism is our Economy. All Power to the People.” He urged that his followers and others in the Third World should “cooperate, collaborate, get together, assist one another.” In the West he might have said, “love one another,” but this was, after all, Pakistan. In the elections of 1970 his party swept the Punjab and Sindh, although it registered little success elsewhere in the country. In keeping with his claims to be a radical, Bhutto launched a campaign against the feudalists and their accomplices who ruled the country: “They
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have sucked the blood of the people and have mercilessly looted them,” he ranted.13 Ayub Khan had him arrested and widespread protests followed. But when the armies of Pakistan were defeated by the Bangladeshis and Indians, his star shone even brighter and he became the first civilian ruler of Pakistan in twenty-five years. No politician in the country’s history has ever enjoyed the same popular esteem. His credibility rested on his capacity to articulate the discontent of the majority of Pakistanis and especially his criticism of the economic elites. In early 1972 he undertook a wave of nationalizations that included not only heavy industry such as iron and steel and petrochemicals but also banks. In response, the owners of capital, feeling persecuted, fled the country, and Pakistan’s international credit rating went into free fall. As the fiscal indicators moved towards the zero mark, tension rose. Riots began to erupt between the muhajirs, who had established a powerful hold on the economy of Karachi and their Sindhi neighbours, while animosity grew between the mujahirs and their economic rivals, the Punjabis. Slowly it had become apparent that the hopes of the many in Bhutto were to be in vain. Bhutto increasingly turned to repression and blamed the West. Like Suharto under duress, in 1973, following the October war between Israel and its neighbours, he also ostentatiously embraced Islam. By 1976 he had replaced many of the stalwarts of the PPP with Muslims, and in 1977 he rigged and won another election. In the same year he created the Federal Security Force, a praetorian guard of thuggish tendencies. But by this time, not only was the business bourgeoisie against him, so too was the military. The muhajirs who had initially supported him had now abandoned him in despair. The feudal landholders and tribal leaders whom he had sustained did not come to his rescue. Against a rising crescendo of political protest, on 5 July 1977 Bhutto was overthrown in an army coup led by a commander-in-chief who was his appointee. The justification of General Mohammed Zia ul-Haq (r. 1977–88) was that of military despots everywhere – the country had to be saved from chaos. And as in other army coups, the general who was to guarantee salvation claimed to have no long-term political ambitions. Power, he promised, would be returned to the civilians within ninety days. On 4 April 1979, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was hanged, to universal protest, in Rawalpindi jail. “The killing of an elected prime minister by the Zia regime indicated the military’s immense power, and provided a warning that the politicians must not question
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the organization’s interests.”14 Once the man himself was gone, the myth of Bhutto rose from the dead to dance on Zia’s grave. In 1981 the PPP, with which he had been in a state of perpetual war, united with a dozen other opposition parties to form the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy (MRD). the opportunity of radical islam
Bhutto’s hangman had advertised himself as a simple soldier and an ardent Muslim. Between July 1977 and January 1986, Zia ruled Pakistan under martial law, fashioning for himself the title “Martial Law Administrator.” The use of arbitrary arrest, torture, incarceration, and executions cowed his critics. Independent sources of authority, such as the judiciary, were neutralized. Before Zia, Bhutto had flirted with Islamic radicalism in order to enhance his own popularity. But in his last years the political geography of Islam had changed and the most unprecedented change had taken place on Pakistan’s western borders. First of all there was Iran. There, as we shall see further in the next chapter, in the second part of the 1970s, after years of repression, the forces of opposition to the shah had revived and regrouped. By 1977, the year of Bhutto’s overthrow, they had begun their relentless advance. Two years later the Iranian monarchy had been replaced by an Islamic republic and the shah was dead. The Iranian revolution offered an irresistible opportunity for Zia; he could now appeal to the petro-potentates in the Gulf for assistance against the spread of a radical form of Islam that they abjured. What was more, the Iranians were Shi’as (as was around 20 per cent of Pakistan’s population). But the Iranian revolution was not the only major political shift that had taken place. In December 1979, while the new Islamic state of Iran was emerging, the situation in Afghanistan had become radically transformed – the Soviets had invaded to prop up the foundering communist government there. The capital of Pakistan, Islamabad, was hardly 500 kilometres from Kabul. With militant Shi’ism and communism rising up on the borders of the Arab Middle East, the purses of the Saudis and their Gulf neighbours snapped open. Arms and funds flowed to Pakistan – $3.3 million in military and economic assistance. Washington now became involved in two campaigns, the first to contain the Iranian revolution and the second to block the Soviet invaders of Afghanistan. Pakistan now served as a Western outpost, like Japan had at the time of the Korean War. “After
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December 1979, the military not only ruled the roost in Pakistani society but acted as defenders of a state deemed by the United States and the Western allies to be on the ‘front line’ between Soviet Russia and the ‘free world.’”15 During the last decade of the Cold War, the military elite of Pakistan had again struck it rich. Beneath the uneven surface of the Pakistani dictatorship, politics, involving contending military and civilian factions, continued to ferment. The prizes were compelling: Pakistan was not only the recipient of dazzling amounts of military aid but was also the beneficiary of huge sums of humanitarian relief designed to sustain the three million Afghani refugees who had fled from the Soviet invasion. There was also another income stream for the Pakistani military: drugs. A large part of the guerrilla war against the Soviets in Afghanistan was financed from the sale of heroin derived from Afghani poppies. Soon Afghani heroin was to swamp the markets of the West. In the midst of this came tragedy or, at least, mystery and certainly opportunity. In August 1988 Zia ul-Haq was assassinated by means of a bomb planted in his Hercules C-130. With him on his final ride were key military advisors and the US ambassador. Mystery surrounded the crash. Benazir Bhutto and Muhammed Mian Nawaz Sharif now stepped forward to fill the vacuum. benazir, sharif , musharraf : 1988–2008
Benazir Bhutto (b. 1953), the hanged prime minister’s daughter, had fled to London upon her father’s death. In April 1986 she returned home. Two years later, the army stood aside to allow elections; the Bhuttos, incorporeal and real, won 92 out of 207 seats. In December 1988 Benazir Bhutto became prime minister at age thirty-five, the first woman to head a government in a contemporary Muslim state. Lacking an overall majority, her party was forced into alliance with the party of the muhajirs, the MQM, which commanded Karachi. For the next decade Benazir and her rival, Sharif, the one a Sindhi and the other a Punjabi, the one a landlord aligned with the feudal and the other with the commercial/industrial class, and both unscrupulous plunderers, would dominate Pakistani politics. The country meanwhile lived off foreign remittances and military aid. By the early 1990s the state was pouring 88 per cent of its current expenditure into defence, administrative costs, and debt servicing, leaving little for social or economic investment. The country’s economy in the 1990s remained primarily based in agriculture
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– with 66 per cent of the population still living in rural areas in 1993 and over 31 per cent of these living in poverty. The main industrial activity was the processing and manufacturing of cotton goods. And at 3.1 per cent Pakistan had one of the highest population growth rates in the world. Sharif was in power in October 1999 when there was another military coup, which this time installed General Pervez Musharraf in power. Having tried to kill Musharraf by causing the plane in which he was travelling to crash, Sharif was himself dismissed at gunpoint. It should be obvious by now that besides such major vested interests as the landowners, the muhajir commercial elite, and the high-level bureaucrats, the military has also played a decisive role in both domestic Pakistani politics and Pakistan’s foreign affairs. Ayesha Siddiqa suggests that the military is, in fact, the largest political party in the country.16 Its role became firmly established during the dictatorship of General Ayub Khan (r. 1958–69) and became more deeply embedded thereafter. Yet, the military was more than just a political party; for it is also a major force in Pakistan’s economy, controlling, through its own foundations, billions of dollars worth of assets, including textile and jute factories, cement, and fertilizer plants, sugar mills, power companies, hospitals, schools, a university, and nearly seven million acres of farmland. These assets are not monitored or even taxed by the state. Musharraf remained in power through the events of 9/11, when the Americans insisted that Pakistan should be 100 per cent for or 100 per cent against them. He wisely decided on the former course – and continued ruling until the end 2007 while making efforts to deal with “terrorism” on the Pakistani-Afghani frontier and, increasingly, in Pakistan itself. In 2007 there were sixty suicide bombings in Pakistan, leaving 770 people dead and nearly 1,600 injured. In his first major speech after the coup that brought him to power, the general stared into the abyss that seemed to be Pakistan’s future: “Fifty-two years ago we started with a beacon of hope and today that beacon is no more and we stand in darkness. There is despondency and hopelessness surrounding us with no light visible anywhere around. The slide down has been gradual but has rapidly accelerated in the last many years.”17 According to the 2006 UN Human Development Index, Pakistan stood 134th out of 177 states, eight places below India and just two above Ghana, one of the few African countries to have made it into the “Medium Human Development” category. More than 30 per cent of Pakistani children are born with a low birth weight (a figure higher than Burkina Faso or
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Sierra Leone), and over half of the adult population is illiterate; this rises to 75 per cent for females. Schools are woefully inadequate; elite English-language schooling is beyond the reach of the majority, and there are no social services. Almost no one pays taxes. Debt slavery, as we have seen, and child bonded labourers are commonplace. The social and political elite, although often divided, seems united in its dedication to its own wealth, its colossal corruption, and to the limited social mobility for the majority. Musharraf, encountering powerful resistance to proposed reforms, seems to have given up in the face of what in other instances has been called “savage capitalism.” In December 2007 Benazir Bhutto returned to Pakistan, and on the 27th she was assassinated. A month earlier, London journalist Tariq Ali had written gloomily, “In Pakistan … the long night continues.”18 Few states in Asia have suffered as much as Pakistan from predictions of imminent morbidity. “There is a sense in which Pakistan’s economy is living on borrowed time,” wrote one commentator over two decades ago.19 In the elections of February 2008, the Pakistan Muslim League-F (PML-F), the vehicle of General Musharraf, was crushed, as were the religious parties. In the North-West Frontier Province, largely populated by Pashtuns, the Islamicist Mutttehida Majlis Amal (MMA) was defeated by the secular Awami National Party. In the heart of the country, Nawaz Sharif’s Muslim League, firmly based in Punjab, and the PPP, now in the hands of Benazir’s jailbird husband, Asif Ali Zardari, and their son Bilawal, who had spent most of his life in England, triumphed and formed a coalition. Both of these parties were urban based, mirroring the transformation of Pakistan to a country that is nearly 50 per cent urban. In early 2011 Osama bin Laden was assassinated by American Special Forces in his house in Abbotabad, near the Pakistani equivalent of West Point. Together with the regular slaughter of Pakistani troops and civilians by American drones, this brought US-Pakistani relations to a new low. The December 2011 cover of Atlantic Monthly referred to Pakistan as “The Ally from Hell.” afghanistan : losing the great game
In 1747 Ahmad Shah Durrani of Kandahar was chosen as king of the Abdalis, one of the two major tribal groups of the Sunni Pashtuns, the largest Afghani ethnic group. The Pashtuns lived to the south of the
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Hindu Kush mountain range that stretched right across the middle of Afghanistan. Scattered among them were other groups, Persian and Turkic-speaking, the Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras, and Turkmens, some of whom were Shi’a. The attitude of Ahmad Shah Durrani towards the Shi’as was pragmatic; they were to be accepted as a part of the new multi-ethnic and multi-confessional nation. One view of the Durrani Empire shows it stretching from the Arabian Sea in the south to the Amu Darya River in the north and from eastern Iran in the west to Pakistan in the east. The whole of the Indus valley as well as Baluchistan, now part of Pakistan, was part of this empire. Defying the embrace of Mughal India and Safavid Iran, Ahmad Shah united most of the Pashtun tribes and soon gained control over much of southern Afghanistan and Kashmir, even envisaging the whole of Iran as a Durrani client state. At this point it should be stressed that by the early seventeenth century the region of Afghanistan had long since been a crossroads for the trade between India, Persia, and Central Asia. Far from being the backwater to which colonialism later relegated it, it was on its way to becoming a key link in the economic life of the region. It was this growing commercialism, and the wealth that followed from it, that prompted the Durranis to attempt to control it. The peace and security that the Mughals had brought to India and the Safavids to Iran from the late sixteenth century might have led Afghanistan towards a greater degree of stability and prosperity had the region not become, in the nineteenth century, a buffer zone in the “Great Game” played by the British and the Russians. Ahmad Shah’s son, Taimur Shah, the second of the Durrani dynasty, moved the capital of the emergent Afghani Empire eastwards from Kandahar to Kabul. The Durranis continued to rule the Afghani core area until 1973 when the last of their kings, Zahir Shah (r. 1933–73) was deposed and Afghanistan was declared a republic. In the nineteenth century the British in India had tried to expand their control in all directions. On three occasions, beginning in 1839, they had sent armies into Afghanistan and on all occasions they had been defeated – in one case, almost utterly destroyed. The First (1839–42), Second (1878–80), and Third (1919) Afghan Wars proved that there were limits to the success of even the most dogged colonial armies. Having failed to subdue the Pashtuns militarily, the British thought that they might buy, or at least rent, the allegiance of their most powerful leaders and create a buffer between themselves and the Russians. This policy was spectacularly successful in the case of Amir Abdul
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Rehman, the “Iron Emir,” who ruled from 1880 to 1901 and who not only brought the rebellious Pashtun tribes to heel but conquered much of northern Afghanistan, ending the independence of the Hazaras and the Uzbeks.20 Abdul Rehman did not scruple to embark on ethnic cleansing when he found this useful, nor did the British, who subsidized his political expansion. Two of the amir’s other practices affected the political and ethnic landscape of Afghanistan: he resettled the Pashtuns, who were loyal to him in the conquered lands to the north; and he developed and maintained a corps of police spies to ensure that rebellion might be anticipated and quashed. One of the consequences of the international politics of the Age of Empire was the drawing of the Durrand Line, devised in 1893 mainly for British purposes to separate Afghanistan from India. The Pashtuns never accepted this division. Thus, in spite of the gradual coalescence of frontiers around what was to become Afghanistan, within these frontiers there was seething strife, often amounting to civil war. After the Iron Emir, Afghanistan remained in the British orbit until World War II. Gradually, its small, educated elite sought to move the country into the modern world, but their efforts were opposed by the entrenched influence of tribal and religious leaders, often one in the same. Far from being swept away by the nationalism, secularism, and even communism of their neighbours, the elite dug in, rallying their heavily armed menfolk in periodic revolts against any form of centralized authority. In 1933 King Zahir Shah came to power and held on until he was deposed by his cousin, Sardar Mohammed Daud, head of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) in 1973. The PDPA was a wolf in sheep’s clothing: in spite of its name, it was a communist party. Afghanistan was declared a republic and Mohammed Daud became its president. Modernization, along communist lines, was at the top of the agenda. By the late 1970s, the population of Afghanistan was estimated to be just over thirteen million peasants and three quarters of a million nomads. communists
The communists remained in power in Afghanistan, independently, from 1973 to 1979. Their objects were to modernize the country. Bringing about changes required constant battles with Afghanistan’s Muslim leaders who preferred illiteracy, the subservience of women,
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and their own control. As in most of the rural Muslim world, the position of women was beyond horror. Between 1956 and 1978 the rulers of the Soviet Union backed their comrades in Afghanistan to the tune of some $2.5 billion in civilian and military aid. Thereafter, as we shall see, they took over the country. There were two factions among the communists, the ruling Parcham, under Mohammed Daud, and their rivals, the Khalq. Daud tried to extirpate the Khalq but his attempts backfired and, in a counter-coup on 27 April 1976, he was destroyed. The counter-coup was called the “Saur (April) Revolution.” Afghanistan now came under Nur Mohammed Turaki as president. Turaki initiated a set of sweeping reforms. In their preoccupation in dealing with their rivals on the left, the Khalq leaders had ignored the rising tide of rebellion among the Islamic feudalists in the provinces. In mid-March 1979 this took the form of an outright revolt in the western city of Herat in which hundreds of PDPA officials and military officers, alongside their Soviet advisors, were killed. The revolt was crushed mercilessly by government forces using tanks and backed by jets flown by Russian pilots. The Herat rebellion had been brewing for more than a year. It was stimulated by the return to Afghanistan of Muslim radicals from revolutionary Iran. As the radicals flowed back, the Islamists who had fled to the Pakistani city of Peshawar were busy forging new alliances and convincing rural people of different ethnic groups and clans that the communists were venal and, thus, unsupportable. The crushing of the Herat rebellion convinced many that the country would have to be returned to its own righteous, just, and, obviously, God-fearing past. The cause of an Islamic state suddenly became attractive; those that struggled for it saw themselves as mujahideen, “soldiers of the Holy War.” Between the Herat rebellion in mid-March and the Soviet invasion of Christmas Day 1979 both the situation in the countryside and the political situation in Kabul turned from bad to catastrophic. Washington, seizing on the opportunity to injure its Soviet rival, had begun to aid the anti-Soviet mujahideen; on 3 July 1979, President Carter had signed a presidential decree authorizing secret aid to the Muslim rebels. Not to put too fine a point on it, Washington was now backing one of the most reactionary political movements in the Third World. Complicating the political situation in the capital was the rivalry between president Turaki and his prime minister, Hafizullah Amin. During the summer, while the Americans were stimulating the forces of reaction in the countryside, the Soviets had decided that Amin was an
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obstacle to the reforms that they had felt were necessary to prevent the disintegration of a valuable asset. They sought especially the broadening of the base of the government by the inclusion of members of their Parcham favourites. Amin would have to go: an attempt was made on 14 September to assassinate him but he escaped. Then came the moment of blowback: Amin seized power and executed Turaki together with a number of others, including imprisoned Parchamis. Relations between Kabul and Moscow now crumpled, while in the provinces the Muslim opposition turned up the offensive. As the Soviet ambassador in Kabul later recalled, “Kabul was weakened. The army was deprived of a head after Amin’s purges and reprisals. The clergy was against [the regime]; the peasants – against; the tribes – who had to endure much from Amin – against. Around Amin there were only a few lackeys, who like parrots repeated after him all kinds of nonsense about the ‘build-up of socialism’ and the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat.’”21 Faced with another impending disaster on its frontiers and alarmed by the intelligence that the Islamicist regime in Tehran would attempt to nullify communist influence and spread its own doctrines into the largely Muslim Soviet republics to the south, in December 1979 the Red Army invaded. Soon there were 50,000 Soviet troops in the country. In October (1979) small detachments of Soviet troops from Central Asia had already been moved to Afghanistan, and in early December commandos were flown to the Baghram air base north of Kabul. On Christmas Day airborne units were landed in both Baghram and Shindand in western Afghanistan. Motorized infantry crossed the border. Two days later special units attacked the Presidential Palace and executed Amin along with several of his followers and relatives. This was to be the last, and the most expensive, Soviet coup d’état in history. Babrak Karmal, who had been exiled to Czechoslovakia by Amin, was flown into Kabul and proclaimed himself prime minister on 28 December. By the beginning of 1980 Afghanistan had become a Soviet satellite. According to President Carter, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was the greatest threat to peace since the Second World War. The Chinese were also upset and became one of the earliest suppliers of arms to the Muslim guerrillas. The Red Army remained in Afghanistan for a decade, increasingly besieged by foes near and far, although, on the whole, perhaps more successful than the American-led International Security Alliance Force (ISAF) forces that subsequently infested the country. In the summary of a former British ambassador: “Despite their losses, the Russians won
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most of their fights. They kept the main roads open, something we cannot always do today. They broke mujahideen attempts to besiege cities. They mounted large operations, mustering up to 12,000 troops, to suppress mujahideen bases and formations. They put together an Afghan army, armed with heavy weapons, which often fought well enough … But the Russians never got over their basic weakness: they could take the territory, but they never had enough troops to hold it.”22 Karmal sought to distance himself from the extremism of Amin but proved to be too weak and indecisive to either inspire or unite the Afghani communists. Moscow continued to support Karmal until May 1986 and then replaced him as president with the head of the secret police, Muhammed Najibullah, “the Ox.” By the time they left the country, Afghanistan was a ruin and the Soviet Union was on the verge of extinction. Millions of Pushtuns had fled the country, settling across the border in Pakistan. islamists
We have seen that the Muslim offensive in Afghanistan was stimulated by the advent of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) that took power with the assassination of the last of the Durranis, Muhammed Daoud Khan, in April 1978. By the time of the Herat rebellion a year later, the Muslim offensive had deepened and broadened. With the decision in July 1979 by President Carter that Islamic resistance would be funded by the United States, its future was assured, even though its form remained undefined. After the Soviet invasion of December 1979, it became an irresistible force. Resistance to the communist regime had stiffened during the winter of 1978–79. One of the first organizations to rise against the Kabul regime was the Hizb e-Islami (“the Muslim Party”). The Hizb e-Islami had been organized among the mainly Pashtun Muslim refugees in Pakistan, above all in Peshawar, and was supported by the Pakistani ISI. The Pakistani dictator, General Zia ul-Haq, was firmly behind the ISI, and at Zia’s elbow were the Americans: in February 1980 Zbigniew Brzezinski, the US national security advisor, had flown to Karachi to talk about expanded “covert action.” The most unrelenting of Cold Warriors, he gleefully clutched at the possibility that Afghanistan would become the Soviet Union’s Vietnam. All the while, assassins of the Hizb e-Islami had been liquidating PDPA leaders in Kabul. The communists responded by hanging Muslim militants.
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When the Soviet tanks had arrived in Kandahar in late 1979, resistance coalesced first around Pashtun clan chiefs and mullahs. It was quite spontaneous and not remarkably well organized. It was not seen as a religious war (jihad) so much as a war of national, or at least ethnic, resistance – as had been the wars against the British a century earlier. Loyalty in Pashtun-dominated southern Afghanistan depended in equal parts on finance and ideology: finance provided arms and supplies; men fought for those who provided them with hardware. Income from smuggling, especially of opium, was always important. Among the Pashtuns there were normally major rifts, for instance between the hard-line Islamicists who dreamed of theocracy and detested tribalism and the others, mainly locals, who accepted the social status quo and yearned for peace and, ideally, a Pashtun tribal renaissance. Many of the latter fantasized the return of the ageing ex-king, Zahir Shah, who was in exile in Rome. There were also the opportunists who trimmed their sails according to the prevailing winds. From late 1980 into 1981, some of the Afghani mujahideen became influenced by advisors who were themselves graduates of the schools associated with Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia. These were “fundamentalists” in the sense that they rejected all forms of political and social organization other those that their leaders claimed were justified by strict readings of the Quran and the Traditions. The rulers of Saudi Arabia, grown fat with rents from oil since they had nationalized the ArabAmerican Oil Company (ARAMCO) in 1978, had agreed to match any contribution to the Muslim guerrillas that the Americans made. “We don’t do operations,” admitted the head of Saudi intelligence. “We don’t know how. All we know how to do is write checks.”23 By the early 1980s, control of the countryside had slipped from the hands of the regime in Kabul. Once they gained control, the more ardent Islamists destroyed the infrastructure that had been established since the time of the monarchy – schools, hospitals, clinics, communications, transport, and organizations were all utterly extirpated. The soldiers of the Afghan and Soviet armies were the special targets of the guerrillas: by early 1984, 17,000 Afghan and around 8,000 Soviet troops had been killed. Estimates of the number of Afghanis killed stand at around 1.5 million. The army of the mujahideen continued to grow. Although thousands of guerrillas had been killed in combat, recruitment never faltered. Between 1984 and 1986, 80,000 went through the training camps where they were instructed in the use of American arms by Pakistanis and Americans, using US military manuals. From 1986 the balance of air
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power shifted when the guerrillas were armed with ground-to-air missiles – some from the Soviet Bloc – against Soviet helicopters. The guerrillas (now referred to as jihadis) came from forty-three different countries and especially Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Algeria, and Egypt. By 1986 the Saudis were providing them with as much as $240 million a year, half the total that was being poured into the country. The $500 million in aid to the guerrillas was double the amount available to Kabul that was being stiffened by 115,000 Russian troops. Together, the Russians and the Afghani army tried to secure the urban areas and the communications centre and hold back the tide in the rural areas. By the end of the 1980s the Soviets had changed their minds about Afghanistan. Over the decade since they had invaded they had lost 14,500 soldiers, a quarter of American losses in Vietnam, and spent $45 billion. Their final withdrawal, negotiated in May 1988 under UN auspices with Washington and Islamabad on the basis of multilateral non-interference in Afghani affairs, took place on 15 February 1989. Was it a coincidence that four months later that Zia ul-Haq, who backed the jihadists, was assassinated? It might be tempting to think that the Soviets were defeated by the Muslim guerrillas but the matter is not so simple. In the late 1980s, when the Soviets were attempting to put an end to the ruinous military competition with the United States, the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev (r. 1985–91) decided that the campaign in Afghanistan was a wasteful diversion. In the view of Patrick Cockburn, the Financial Times correspondent in Moscow, the Soviets could not win as long as Pakistan supported the guerrillas. And over the decade of the 1980s, given the Soviet objective or reaching détente with America, Afghanistan had become increasingly a political liability.24 In spite of the UN agreement, the Americans and the Saudis kept the taps open, together agreeing to support the mujahideen with a billion dollars a year – the export trade in opium also added to their war chests. The Pakistanis reneged on the peace agreement and kept the training camps and the transportation routes serviceable. The guerrillas thus had every reason to fight on. From the US embassy in Islamabad a cable was sent to the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia: “WE WON.” American interest in Central Asia now went into rapid detumescence. the end of the affair
The regime of President Muhammad Najibullah was on its last legs and those legs collapsed when, on 31 December 1991, the Soviet Union
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broke up and military and economic aid ceased. No longer could Hajibullah subsidize his tribal allies. Over the winter of 1991–92 the premier Muslim party Hizb-e Islami, under Gulbuddin Hikmatyar (b. 1946), swept to power over southern Afghanistan – but not either the north or the west where the militias of the non Pashtun parties, the Tajiks, the Hazaras, and the Uzbeks, stood guard. In March 1992, after negotiations with the UN, he decided to step down. After having rocketed Kabul mercilessly throughout the year, Taliban forces took the capital on 26 September 1996. On 27 September they captured, tortured, and executed ex-president Najibullah, who had sought safe haven in the United Nations compound. Fifty thousand people had been killed in the attack. The Taliban now ruled southern, but still not northern, Afghanistan. Immediately, their government issued a set of rules that reflected the values that had been proclaimed in Kandahar: dress was prescribed, women were to be sequestered, all forms of art, music (including whistling kettles), and public pleasure were to be interdicted. Non-Muslims were to wear yellow. In Pakistan, there was jubilation: the man the ISI had helped make was now in charge. And in Washington, a State Department spokesman had said that there was nothing objectionable about Taliban policies. The tail was now wagging the dog: Washington was now following the lead of Islamabad. Unsurprisingly, the head of the Unocal oil company announced that they regarded the Taliban’s victory as very positive. “The Taliban will probably develop like the Saudis did. There will be Aramco, pipelines, an emir, no parliament and lots of Sharia law. We can live with that,” explained one US diplomat.25 The mujahideen, now in occupation of Kabul, formed a new government under Sibghatullah Mujaddidi, the head of a coalition of Muslim groups known as the “Mujahedun Alliance.” Mujaddidi was a Muslim scholar from an elite family that had been close to King Daud and that was quite Westernized. During the years of opposition to the communists when he had headed the Islamic Revolutionary Movement (IRM) he had visited Washington on a regular basis. In early 1983 the IRM joined Islamic Alliance of Afghan Mujahideen (IAAM), usually known simply as “the Mujahideen.” One of Mujaddidi’s followers was Hamid Karzai. Karzai was the chief of the Popalzai tribe of Pashtuns of Kandahar province. His father had been murdered in 1999 by the Taliban, perhaps with the complicity of the Pakistani ISI. Karzai was not merely a royalist but one who spoke English fluently and had many friends among the Americans of the State
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Department and the CIA. Two of his brothers had Afghani restaurants in the United States. In mid-1994 he slipped out of Kabul and moved to Quetta, south of Kandahar in the Baluchi part of Pakistan. There he formed an association with the Taliban, many of whose leaders he had fought alongside in the war against the Soviets. the mujahideen and the taliban to 11 september 2001
Although the Muslims had united against the communists, they were divided among themselves both horizontally and vertically. Horizontally, Afghanistan was still fissured between tribes and clans, each commanding its own territory, asserting its own culture, and supporting its own political leadership. The Karzai clan of the Pashtuns, as we have suggested, were royalists. Vertically, Afghani Islam was polarized between the “fundamentalists” and the “moderates.” The fundamentalists were those who were at war with modernism, that is, the contemporary world, specifically its religious slackness, its political corruption, and its moral flabbiness, especially in relation to the control of women. They were especially incensed by the domination of the lands of the Muslims by Non-Believers, especially Americans. All of this led them to radical action against the political status quo. The moderates were uneasy about corruption but were more willing to make accommodations. While this bifurcation between tribes and ideologies seems simple enough, in reality it was not. First of all, people changed their minds, first supporting one group, then shifting to its rival. This often depended not on belief but on more material considerations. Secondly, there was money; even the most righteous had to make alliances where necessary, especially with political leaders whom they abjured. The radicals would have got nowhere if they had not accepted handouts from the Saudi princes and American plotters that passed through the Pakistani fixers. Although many of the Saudis, like King Faud (r. 1982–95), were notoriously venal, this could be overlooked. By the end of 1994, with Afghanistan in a state of almost total disintegration, the Pashtun mullahs in southern Afghanistan had decided that they had seen enough civil and ethnic war and decided to form a new party, at first unnamed, that came to be called the Taliban.26 The founders of the Taliban became willing members of the global jihad that sought to bring peace to an Afghanistan that was to be resurrected under Muslim (Sharia) law and was thus part of the global community
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of Islam, the umma. They also had a hidden agenda: to unite the country under Pashtun rule. Elected in the spring of 1994 as the head of the Taliban was Mullah Muhammad Omar Akhund (1959–2001), a Pashtun preacher who had fought as a guerrilla against the communist government. His first campaign to restore law and order is now a matter of local legend: with thirty men he attacked a military garrison, the commander of which had raped two teenaged girls. Obviously gifted with a talent for political theatre, when Mullah Omar overcame the garrison, he hanged the commander from the barrel of a tank cannon. Soon after that, a party militia was formed, backed by small local businessmen yearning for security. Warlordism, rampant in southern Afghanistan where it had had virtually destroyed trade, was soon wiped out. The Pakistanis, who benefited from trade with Afghanistan, applauded. Soon both the powerful Durrani Pashtun chieftains and the ISI were backing the mullah’s side. Among the Durranis was the Popalzai, the tribe of Ahmad Shah Durrani himself. The Taliban were thus, from the beginning, a very Pushtun affair. By the end of 1994 Kandahar with its huge arsenal of Soviet equipment, including tanks and jet fighters, was in the hands of Mullah Omar’s forces, by now numbering around 12,000, mostly madrasa students. By September 1995 the army of the Taliban, by now double in strength, had conquered Herat, earlier pounded by the Soviets. Herat was a city of half a million that was the centre of the three western, Dari-speaking, provinces of Afghanistan. Its adjacent military base provided the Taliban with a rich hoard of forty-one aircraft. Once they had secured the city and driven out the local leader, Ismael Khan, the Taliban closed down all of its numerous schools. Herat was now ruled by outsiders who not only did not speak the local language but had a hostile regard for the social and educational progress that had taken place there. Kandahar, the ancient Pushtun capital, now rose again to become the centre of the Taliban universe. Dilip Hiro describes this brave new puritanical world. Settling down in Kandahar, Mullah Omar lost no time in disarming civilians and irregular militias and imposing his exceedingly puritanical version of the Sharia. He required women to wear the head-to-toe shrouds, burqas, and men to don long shirts, loose trousers and turbans, and grow bushy beards by not cutting or shaving facial hair … while banning long hair in order to “prevent
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British and American hairstyles.” He shut down all girls’ schools and forbade women from working outside the home. His blanket ban on music … and television resulted in the destruction of audio- and video-tapes as well as television sets … The reason for prohibiting music, singing and dancing was that, in the view of Mullah Omar and fellow clerics, they aroused lust and led to fornication, thus undermining marital fidelity and the stable family structure which were the foundations of a truly Islamic social order … Mullah Omar also prohibited such leisure activities as chess, football and kite flying as well as keeping birds as pets.27 In April 1996 mullahs from all over southern Afghanistan assembled in Kandahar to name Mullah Omar as Amir al-Muminen, “Commander of the Faithful.” A few weeks later, Robin Raphel, a representative of the US State Department (and ex-wife of the US ambassador assassinated at the side of Zia ul-Haq) visited the mullah’s headquarters in Kandahar. She announced, “We do not see ourselves inserting in the middle of Afghan affairs, but we consider ourselves as a friend of Afghanistan … We are concerned that economic opportunities here will be missed, if political stability cannot be restored.”28 By “economic opportunities,” Raphel was referring to the building of a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan, a project of the US oil giant Unocal.29 Her visit was seen as conferring recognition by the Clinton administration on the Taliban as a player in Afghani politics; indeed, according to Ahmed Rashid, “the Clinton administration was clearly sympathetic to the Taliban,” all the more since it seemed that Unocal might prosper under the strict rule of the fundamentalists.30 Zalmay Khalilzad, later to become the Bush administration’s ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq, and the United Nations, besides being a leading member of the neo-conservative “Project for the New American Century,” which advocated US “leadership” abroad, was a lobbyist for Unocal. In early October 1996 he wrote an article in the Washington Post stressing that the Taliban in Afghanistan did not practice anti-US fundamentalism like Iran. Rather, he argued, the Taliban’s fundamentalism, leavened by the culture of the Pashtuns, was of a gentler kind, like that of the regime in Saudi Arabia. Obviously, the United States and the new regime had common interests. The World Bank, of course, preferred strict rule to chaos, and, without its assistance, the kind of economic development for which Unocal and other foreign firms hungered simply could not proceed. So, with
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the Taliban secure in Kabul, aid from Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, the United States (via Pakistan), and the World Bank flowed even more abundantly. The formerly communist Russians and their formerly satellite republics to the north of Afghanistan were alarmed. By early 1997, 70 per cent of Afghanistan was under Taliban rule. In May, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia recognized the regime. Out of desperation, in June 1997 the enemies of the Taliban, the Uzbekis and the Hazaras, formed the United National Islamic Front (UNIF). “The United Nations estimated that Taliban-ruled Kabul now held fifty thousand widows unable to work or walk in the street without the risk of beatings from religious police. Those widows were the mothers of 400,000 children.”31 enter osama
In May 1996 Osama bin Laden, the millionaire scion of Saudi Arabia’s most successful construction magnate, pledged allegiance to Mullah Omar. A convert to “political Islam,” bin Laden had gone to Peshawar in 1982 to join the fight against the Soviets alongside the Palestinian preacher and mujahid, Abdullah Azzam.32 It was Azzam’s Maktab alKhidmat that was the basis of al-Qaeda that was founded in August 1988. In 1990 bin Laden left Pakistan and settled in Sudan (where he organized the failed attempted assassination of President Mubarak of Egypt). Forced to leave the Sudan, he returned to Afghanistan, where he picked up where he had left off. It seems possible that the Pakistani ISI may have facilitated bin Laden’s introduction to the Taliban; certainly, it facilitated the movement of journalists across the frontier between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Unsurprisingly, bin Laden had few followers in the United States, where earlier in 1996 the State Department had described him as the most significant financial sponsor of Islamic extremist activities in the world today. Plans to assassinate him were drawn up but came to nothing. With the support of Mullah Omar, to whom he offered his allegiance, bin Laden organized the establishment of training bases on the frontier between Pakistan and Afghanistan. In February 1998 he and his colleagues issued a fatwa, justifying war against Americans and their allies – collectively known as “Crusaders,” as well as Jews, especially Israelis. “We believe the biggest thieves in the world are the Americans and the biggest terrorists on earth are the Americans,” bin Laden claimed in a television interview in June 1998. Despite this, Prince Turki, the
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head of Saudi intelligence, ostensibly an unwavering ally of Washington, sent $5 million and 400 Toyota pickups to Kandahar to bolster Mullah Omar’s grip. Alongside the mullah’s troops were those of bin Laden, Arabs, Egyptians, and others, who had fought in foreign wars as far away as Algeria, Chechnya, and Bosnia. Together they attacked, and captured, the Uzbek capital of Mazar e-Sharif on 8 August 1998. The Taliban now controlled 85 per cent of the country, and bin Laden had become a figure approaching world-historic stature, not to say infamy. On 23 August 1996 his supporters carried out a bomb attack at the US base at Al-Khobar in Dharan on the Gulf, killing nineteen Americans. Two years later, on 7 August 1998, suicide bombers of the al-Qaeda organization carried out devastating bombing attacks of US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es-Salaam. In Nairobi, 213 were killed and around 4,000 injured; in Dar es-Salaam eleven died and eighty-five were injured. Around the world Americans and their allies were horrified; nothing like this had happened since the suicide bombing of a Marine barracks in Beirut in April 1983 that had killed sixty-three people, including seven members of the CIA. Then, on 12 October 2000, suicide bombers in a small skiff attacked USS Cole, at anchor in Aden in Yemen, killing a further seventeen American sailors and wounding thirty more. By this time it was widely concluded that bin Laden was planning attack the United States and the Americans had decided that he would have to be destroyed. The modalities of liquidation remained elusive. To summarize: US policy towards the Taliban had changed dramatically in a few short years. In the analysis of Ahmed Rashid, “Between 1994 and 1996 the USA supported the Taliban politically through its allies Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, essentially because Washington viewed the Taliban as anti-Iranian, anti-Shia and pro-Western. The USA conveniently ignored the Taliban’s own Islamic fundamentalist agenda, its suppression of women and the consternation they created in Central Asia, because Washington was not interested in the larger picture. Between 1995 and 1997 US support was even more driven because of its backing for the Unocal project.” reversal of fortunes
The Taliban remained in power in Kabul from 1996 until 2001. To the northeast of Kabul in the Panjshir valley, the Tajik guerrilla commander Ahmed Shah Massoud retained control.
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Then came 9/11: on 9 September Massoud was assassinated by Taliban agents, and two days later New York and Washington suffered the most devastating attack on the American mainland since the War of 1812. President George W. Bush declared war on the Taliban as the central plank of his “War on Terror.” The Saudi regime, from which the Taliban had drawn support over the years, broke off relations with the organization on 25 September. The first American units were inside Afghanistan by 28 September. On the same day President Musharraf of Pakistan had urged the Taliban to hand over bin Laden; in the Gulf, the United Arab Emirates severed relations with the regime. Also on 28 September the United Nations unanimously passed a US-drafted antiterrorist resolution (Resolution 1373) that gave it the status of international law. On 7 and 8 October, US and British air raids on Afghanistan were launched from submarines, aircraft carriers, and land bases. Taliban radar and air-defence installations and its tiny air force were quickly smashed. President Bush was triumphant, and Osama bin Laden, in his statement broadcast on the al-Jazira television station, was defiant. Right across the West, there was support for the American-led attack. Not so in the Middle East, an area normally smothered by press censorship. There, reaction, other than that in the form of the official voice, could only be assumed. Meanwhile, the Taliban, unpursued by American or any other ground troops, slipped across the frontier into their safe havens in Balochistan and Pakistan’s FATA. In the years to come, the latter was to be al-Qaeda’s base area, and home to Osama bin Laden. In early 2002 the Americans were joined by NATO ground forces, including elements from the Canadian army operating as part of the ISAF that had been authorized by the UN in late 2001. By this time the global chorus of concern for the fate of Afghanistan had risen to a crescendo. Security outside of Kabul was in a state of collapse while the drug trade had taken off. Warlords, skimming off profits from foreign aid, arms sales, and the blackmail of traders and drugs, had seized control of much of the countryside. “Reconstruction” was the word that launched a thousand conferences and opened a score of purses in the West, not always to useful effect. Ahmed Rashid comments on three of the many contributions to rebuilding: “Germany’s pathetic, next-to-useless performance in rebuilding the police and Italy’s apathy in rebuilding the justice system became the two weakest points in the international community’s efforts to rebuild state institutions in Afghanistan … Between 2003 and 2005, the United States was to spend some $860 million in training forty thousand policemen, but the results were almost entirely useless.”33
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In December 2004 Hamid Karzai was sworn in as president of Afghanistan. As we have seen, Karzai had been deputy foreign minister in the Mujaddidi government that had been backed by the Taliban. He then changed his mind and became a supporter of the exiled king Zahir Shah in Rome. Just before Kabul fell (12–13 November 2001) he reentered Afghanistan. Karzai’s election was just in time to see the American funding for reconstruction drop off sharply. Afghanistan was now a sideshow, Washington’s preoccupation being with Iraq – invaded in March 2002 – and in catching the leaders of al-Qaeda whose disappearance, and thus survival, was a source of acute embarrassment. The American secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld, declared “the end of combat operations” in Afghanistan, and during the run-up to American elections in 2004 he announced that there was no insurgency. In March of that year al-Qaeda announced its global reach by bombings in a railway station in Madrid that killed nearly 200 people and wounded more than 1,500. In 2005 the Taliban offensive escalated sharply. In late 2005 Canadian and other NATO troops were deployed to the southern provinces – Helmand, Kandahar, Uruzgan, and Nimroz. This was the Pashtun and Taliban heartland, which the Americans had ignored for several years. Taliban forces had been free to enter and withdraw to these areas from bases in Baluchistan (in Pakistan), unhindered by the Pakistani regime. Taliban leaders and their troops also made the mountains that separated Pakistan and Afghanistan – the NWFP and FATA – their havens. They moved quite freely with the consent of the ISI in Pakistani cities like Lahore. At some point, bin Laden set up residence in Abbotabad, a suburb of Islamabad and home of Pakistan’s military academy. None of this was very secret. “The army’s pro-extremist policies in Kashmir and Afghanistan strengthened its ties to Islamic fundamentalist parties at home, making any real curtailing of fundamentalism impossible.”34 No surprises here since Pakistan’s army continued to reap the rewards of American support – to the tune of $700 million in 2004. To Washington, the obsessive interest was in catching the leaders of al-Qaeda, and this required the uncritical dependence on the Pakistani army and the Musharraf regime. Early in 2006 an agreement known as “the London Compact” authorized the expenditure of $10 billion in development funds for Afghanistan. The Canadian expeditionary force operated in Kandahar, the first capital of both the Afghani state and the Taliban. Its foes were the Pashtuns, the first supporters of Mullah Omar. Afghanistan, a state since the time
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of Ahmed Shah Durrani in the middle of the eighteenth century, was declared a “failed state.” In the Western press, the war the Canadians and their NATO allies were engaged was called a “counterinsurgency war,” “counterinsurgency” normally being the term applied to nationalist guerrillas during the period of decolonization and during the Cold War. The regime installed by the United States and its NATO allies never had much chance of success. By early 2007 Taliban power had been restored in much of southern, central, and eastern Afghanistan, and by the end of 2007 talks had begun between representatives of NATO and elements within the Taliban. Three years later, with their militaries stalled and their domestic populations disenchanted, the governments of the NATO states who had sent their troops to Afghanistan were in a state of despair. And Pakistan? Pakistan’s leaders had seen the jihad as a means of mobilizing support on the part of South Asia’s Muslims against India. “Elements in the Pakistani military began secretly deploying Muslim terrorist groups in Kashmir against Indian troops there in the 1990s, and were happy enough for them to get training in the al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan late in that decade and at the beginning of this century.”35 To Pakistanis, it was now not either the Indians or the Islamists that were the main threat to the security of their country. It was the Americans. “Almost half of all Pakistanis blame the United States for most of the violence in their country, while 14 per cent think India is stirring things up … Only one in six Pakistanis told pollsters in 2008 that al-Qaeda and the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban formed the greatest threat to their country.”36 By 2010 there were 15,000 US, British, Canadian, and other troops in Afghanistan fighting a war that its advocates claimed was required to “keep America safe.” The American president had authorized a “surge” of 17,000 extra troops in late 2009, but still the ISAF troops were on the defensive. They had tried counterinsurgency, the pet project of US General Stanley McChrystal, the “rising star” mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, to no avail. The British and Canadians, their populations having become increasingly indifferent to the claims of the Karzai regime and its Washington godfathers, had now gone right off the crusade in Afghanistan. In July 1979 President Carter had signed the first directive in support of the mujahideen who had taken up arms against the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul. The mujahideen had mutated from being freedom fighters to insurgents, and more than thirty years later the Americans and their legions, not forgetting the
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frontline Saudi cheque-writers, struggled on, despite steadily increasing cost in blood and cash. By August 2011 America’s allies had all beaten their way to the exits, or were on their way. Canada’s combat mission had ended. Counterinsurgency had now obviously failed and Taliban had wiped out the proKarzai political rulers of Kandahar. US troops were being killed in record numbers. Bin Laden had been killed in Pakistan, an American ally and the recipient of $20 billion of foreign aid since 2011.37
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8 “Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran”: Dictators and Domination in the Middle East The “modern Arab state[s]”… and their ruling elites and regimes have been durable because in their early decades, they focused heavily on meeting human-development needs (schools, hospitals, telephone, roads, homes, jobs) in relatively successful state-building exercises, and in the past four decades they have focused on security that maintains the existing power configuration. Not a single Arab country can say with any certainty that the configuration of the state, the policies and values of the government, or the perpetuation of the incumbent ruling elite have been validated by the citizenry through any kind of credible, transparent and accountable political process. The Arab state has been transformed into a security system, and the Arab citizen has been downgraded into a mere consumer. Just about the only thing individuals are allowed … is to go shopping. Rami Khouri, “The Arab Paradox”
introduction
In the beginning is the intractable question of the location of the “Middle East.” What are its boundaries? Are Egypt, Sudan, Somalia, and the Maghreb, all in Africa but also in the Middle East, just as Turkey is in both Europe and Asia as well as being a original member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization? And then there is Cyprus, part Turkish, part Greek, certainly Levantine, but a member of the European Union (EU) as well. Going much further back to the beginnings of agriculture circa 11,000 BCE, we find the genesis of “the West” in what we have since the nineteenth century called “the Middle East.”1 Plotting a clear date at which the Orient became separated geo politically from the West is a ticklish task. Perhaps it was in the eighth
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century of the Common Era when Muslim Arabs from western Arabia took over the Middle East, North Africa (al-Maghreb), Spain (al-Andalus), and then moved on to the lands of the Indus (al-Hind). Possibly, it was in the next century when this area began to come under the sway of Turkish-speaking Muslims from Central Asia. Certainly, the gap widened with the fall of Constantinople in 1453 and the occupation of the Balkans. At any rate, by the beginning of the twentieth century, the broad scimitar of states running clockwise from Thrace across Anatolia and then southwards through the Middle East and finally along the North African littoral to the Straits of Gibraltar – with a notable gap where Algeria had been occupied by the French – was still under the nominal sway of the Ottoman sultans of Istanbul. And then, tumult. Continuously, for nearly a century after the cataclysms of World War I, the Middle East became the cynosure of Western imperial and neo-imperial designs and always the target of periodic but continuous violence. Thus, in a region that had enjoyed an Ottoman peace for several centuries, the British, French, Italians, Americans, and much later, the Israelis, have bombed, or threatened to bomb, shelled or machine-gunned Turks, Iraqis, and Syrians; gassed and lynched Cyrenacians; gunned down Algerians; bombarded Lebanese; Cruise-missiled Baghdadis; rocketed Lebanese; and, more recently, from March 2011, dive-bombed Tripoli.2 Complementing this violence, the same powers have sustained and supported venial and often bumbling elites, overthrown reformers, decorated despots, celebrated oligarchs and plutocrats, and schooled torturers. Exaggerated? Perhaps a few more program notes. In the aftermath of World War I, the empire of the Ottomans, together with those of their neighbours, the Hapsburgs and the Romanovs, was declared bankrupt. The Ottomans and the Hapsburgs had been on the wrong side of the war and now they had to pay with dismemberment. (The Romanovs had been on the right side and so their successors, the Bolsheviks, were able to keep their empire, at least for seventy years.) In the place of the Ottomans was created polycentric, polyphonic, and chaotic web of independent states, protectorates, colonies, and mandates, within which lived a clamorous mixture of Arabs, Persians, Greeks, Armenians, Turks, Kurds, Jews, Berbers, and others, most Muslim, a few Christians, and fewer still, like the Alawites of Syria and the Druzes of Lebanon, a bit of both. During World War I the British and French had secretly conspired to divide the Arab territories of the
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Middle East between themselves as protectorates. At war’s end, Iraq, Transjordan (at present simply “Jordan”), and Palestine were handed over to the British and Greater Syria, out of the side Lebanon was prized, to the French. The Arab lands seized from the Ottomans were promised progress and given novel identities, being classified by the newly created League of Nations as “Mandates.” Mandates were Great Power protégés, protectorates in all but name albeit on short leases. They were established by Europe’s victorious powers on the assumption that the locals should obey the rules established in London or Paris in everybody’s interest. The local elites were to become anglophone or francophone and anglicized or francicisée; sometimes their sons learned English and their daughters, French. As an added bonus they were to become modern. This, elite acculturation and modernization, was the essence of colonialism whether adopted in Asia or Africa. “Civilization” was the accepted word for what they were to get; the morbid hand of the Ottomans was amputated in the interests of world, that is, Western, civilization. By about 1920 “Western” no longer meant, implicitly, “Christian,” except to missionaries. The lands and resources of the mandates were thus, not incidentally, added to the wealth and domains of Western European countries. In 1925 or 1945 you could walk or drive from Jerusalem to Johannesburg without leaving territory ruled by the British; the French owned or controlled the shores of the Mediterranean on all three sides. Thus, the situation in the mid-1920s was that the British and the French were the masters of the Middle East. It was they who determined almost all of the new boundaries; they who decided who should rule, and what form of governments should be established, and it was also they, in association with the Americans, who had a major say in how access to the region’s natural resources should be allocated, particularly the oil fields that were just beginning to be discovered along the Persian Gulf and in the Mosul district of northern Iraq. Such was Britain’s and France’s strength that even the ruler of nominally independent countries like Turkey, Egypt and Persia … were forced to recognize the boundaries and the new order, while those like Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud, who aspired to create a new state in Arabia … knew that he could only achieve his goal with British assistance and support … [S]hort as this period now seems, it was then that the framework for Middle
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Eastern political life was firmly laid – together with many of its still unresolved problems involving disputed boundaries, inappropriate political institutions or the existence of many national minorities which either failed to obtain a state of their own, like the Kurds, or were prevented from during so by force majeure, like the Palestinians.3 During World War I the British had bargained with the al-Sauds, a family of tribal rulers, offering them recognition, gold coins, and protection in return for petroleum; the British were thus, as they were elsewhere in the world, king-makers. They did the same with the rulers of Kuwait, and other states in the Gulf, like Bahrain, as well as the mandates, Iraq, and Trans-Jordan. Control over the mandates seemed to be a move of brilliant foresight. If it was the British and the French who drove the Ottomans out and recast the Middle East, in a short space of time they were soon joined by the Americans and, especially after World War II, their wards, Jewish settlers, usually hailing from Europe. These Jews became Israelis. Both Americans and proto-Israeli Zionists had been slipping into the Middle East since the nineteenth century, the Americans especially as missionaries and the Zionists as refugees seeking to create Zion, a homeland where Jews, religious or secular, could live in peace. Together, in the years after World War II, these two groups, Americans and Israelis, would mould the fate of much of the region. This caused anguish among those who saw it and its wealth as rightfully belonging to themselves. And who were these? The Muslim majority in the Middle East saw the region as part of dar al-islam (“the abode of Islam”) in which nonMuslims might be tolerated, or even welcomed, but would never be completely accepted. The Christian minorities saw it as belonging to themselves on the basis of their membership in communities that sometimes existed from the beginning of the Christian era. Nationalist political parties were mainly Muslim but often contained Christians at the highest levels. Within this recast post-Ottoman universe emerged certain lineages, like the Hashemites and al-Sauds, that had political aims that were essentially absolutist. They claimed that they owned the countries that they ruled – thus, we had “Saudi” Arabia and “Hashemite” Jordan. Nowhere else in the world were states named after proprietorial dynasties, dynasties so marked by their servility to Washington and London that they easily qualify as “neocolonial.”
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Nationalists, on the other hand, imagined secular countries that they themselves might resurrect and lead towards more or less modern futures: the Ba’ath party (whose very name means “resurrection”) that sometimes ruled Iraq and Syria was first among these; the Wafd in Egypt was its cousin. The princes, pashas, and mullahs, on the other hand, were comforted, even cosseted. This cherishing of oligarchy and of piety and the assurance of rural stagnancy as a consequence of unreformed land ownership were among the besetting problem of the region. Obviously, the story of the Middle East can hardly be a simple one of conquest, dispossession and resistance, for it is also one of collaboration and connivance. The domestic oligarchies who dominate the region – the princes or the colonels – have been able to remain in, or near, power thanks largely to two policies: first, domestically, a combination of employment and bribes – satisfying what Khouri calls “human development needs”; secondly, the accommodations that they have made with foreign powers – America and France in particular – which have then propped them up with aid and arms. Of course there are no guarantees, even in compliance. Always, we see regimes slipping, or at least transferring, their moorings. Algeria, for example, fought a war of liberation to become free from French colonial rule, and, after the briefest of autonomous honeymoons, saw its rulers, mainly officers from the French colonial army, cast themselves once more into the arms of France. Egypt drove out the British and after a spasm of Arab nationalism that involved going to war with Israel, opened its doors to the Americans and made peace with Israel. Iranians seized their own oil resources and then became Washington’s most faithful ally in the region – at least until they revolted in 1980. In the decades that followed their revolution, the Iranians turned on their former Western patrons, backing organizations like Hizbullah and even Hamas, which sought to destroy the foundations of Western domination in the Middle East. Iraq, in the 1980s serving as a Western surrogate against the Iranians, a decade later found itself victim of Anglo-American aggression, but actually defeated its invaders to become finally independent. Futurists might say that the period that began with the mandates in 1920 will probably have lasted only a hundred years. Within this period, the American “moment” in the Middle East (1945– 2007) will have been only a little longer than the British “moment” (1920–56). This century-long moment has been one of insecurity for many and profit for others. No one suffered more than the Palestinians and the
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Kurds. No one benefited more than the ruling families of the oil-rich states. In the period under study here, of the broad arc of Muslim Eurasian territories running from Thrace to the Indus, only Afghanistan has suffered more destructive interventionism than the states of the Arab world. At the heart of this interventionism is oil. Its possession has guaranteed oligarchy. Islam, in its radical or jihadi form, seemed to be the antithesis of oligarchy, at least until the Arab Spring of 2011 when new ideologies superseded it. oil , islam , and oligarchs
Oil in the Middle East is as silver was to New Spain and gold to the lands of the Moors – the ineluctable source of assured, but ultimately non-renewable, riches. The search for oil in the region had actually begun in the late nineteenth century, during the last decades of the Ottoman Empire. By 1920 the oil-producing lands, so far as they were known at the time, had been apportioned among foreigners. By the 1930s British firms, early off the mark, had a monopoly of oil production in the mandate of Iraq and in independent Iran as well as in a number of the principalities in the Gulf, such as Kuwait. In the same decade, in 1938, the Americans found oil in Saudi Arabia. The French barely had a look-in. In Saudi Arabia alone ARAMCO, the Arab American Oil Company, formed by Chevron and Texaco, gave the Americans control over the world’s single largest untapped source of oil, quite obviously the most valuable resource of the twentieth century. Well before the end of the Second World War it was plain that oil would occupy a key role in the global economy; whoever controlled the world’s oil distribution could be sure of a dominant role in world history. Postwar estimates accepted that the world’s oil reserves stood at around 1.3 trillion barrels. During the period of postwar recovery, to the surprise of many and the delight of those who controlled exploration and production, the demand for oil rose like a rich and over-egged cake. Between 1945 and 1960 oil consumption in Europe and Asia went from 6 million barrels a day to 21 million, US consumption from 1.8 billion barrels in 1946 to 5.4 billion barrels in 1971. Production could hardly keep up; by 1960 the United States was producing only 7 million barrels a day; one-third of total world oil production. In 1938 unsettling writing appeared rather suddenly on the wall. In that year Mexico nationalized its oil, and the British, whose firms thought that they owned it, stood by helplessly. Just over a decade later,
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in 1950, the Saudis forced ARAMCO into a 50/50 profit sharing agreement, while from 1954 Iran got a 50 per cent share of the profits of its oil. In 1963 Iraq took the first steps towards nationalizing the Iraqi Petroleum Company (IPC), which was jointly owned by the Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, Total (French), and a consortium of American companies, each owning 23.75 per cent of the shares. The Iraqis created the Iraqi National Oil Company to compete with the IPC. Oil was now increasingly in the hands not of foreigners but of national oligarchies, and the politics of the Middle East was set on a new course. The price of oil was set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC),4 which took advantage of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War to quadruple international oil prices. Iran’s oil revenue rose vertiginously from $34 million in 1954–55 to $5 billion in 1973–74 and to $23 billion in 1977–78. In an average year it would provide the government with 60 per cent of its revenues. With the oil revenue, the country’s rulers were able to purchase the fifth largest army in the world. By the end of the 1970s both British and the American firms had been forced to relinquish their direct ownership of Middle Eastern oil, while by the beginning of the twenty-first century it was the nationalized oil companies – not only those of the original OPEC members but also of the Libyans, the Nigerians, and other Africans – that had become the dominant producers on the world market. The Saudi-owned ARAMCO came to control over 260 billion barrels of oil reserves;5 ExxonMobil, the biggest of the private firms, controlled a mere twelve billion. Without the oil from Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf states, “the United States and its European allies could never have achieved the spectacular economic growth they posted in the postwar era. Nor could Washington have sustained the great armies, navies, and air forces it deployed in every theatre of possible confrontation with the Soviet Union and its allies.”6 Global consumption has continued its steady rise with, simultaneously, new fields being discovered and warnings being issued that the moment of “peak oil” would soon be reached, if it had not already.7 The “peak oil” point would arrive when half of the world’s supply had been sucked up. The peak moment was said, in one set of predictions, to have arrived in 1970. In others, the dates 2000, 2005, and 2010 were advocated. In 2009 the International Energy Agency, an organization demonstrably susceptible to political pressure, said that it would be possible to increase oil production from the current eightythree million barrels a day to 105 million barrels. Skeptics suggested
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that this was a technicolour dream and that, if the truth were told about the future supplies or even the cost of recovering new sources of oil, there would be panics on the stock markets. Since 1995 the world has used about twenty-four billion barrels of oil a year, in 2006 worldwide total production was eighty-four million barrels a day; demand is expected to rise to around sixty-seven million barrels per day in 2020. However, if the Chinese level of car ownership were to rise to that of the Americans, it is estimated that China alone would need ninety-nine million barrels of oil a day. Up to the beginning of the twenty-first century, oil was hardly a scarce commodity. It had been found almost everywhere – in northern Alberta, the Gulf of Mexico, off the coasts of Brazil, Nigeria, Gabon, Angola, and Vietnam, in Indonesia, in Russia, and in the Caspian. Still, five out of the top six of known deposits are found in the Middle East, where they are likely to remain until at least 2025. Seen from the Washington viewpoint, Saudi Arabia “is … the only major supplier we can be sure will significantly increase its deliveries to us in time of crisis … With no other supplier capable of replacing Saudi Arabia in this critical role, the United States will remain dependent on the kingdom both for day-to-day imports of oil and for increased supplies in times of crisis and conflict.”8 (This comment suggests that the author does not consider Canada, the number one source of US oil imports, entirely dependable.) There can be no doubt that the United States needs a Saudi Arabia that is secure and predictable and that the rulers of Saudi Arabia pray for a protector that is both dependent and dependable. Here then is the basis of a relationship of mutual need that has lasted over the whole period since 1945 but remains complicated by several factors: first, the existence of an expansionist Israel; second, the rise of political Islam; and third, and connected to the foregoing, the fact that in any free election anywhere in the Middle East except, perhaps, Lebanon, the Islamist parties would win. “Even in Lebanon,” notes Eugene Rogan writing of the elections of 2005, “parties explicitly hostile to the United States fared well at the polls.”9 Essential to the manifestos of all of the political parties of the Middle East, then, has been an inveterate hostility to the United States. Thus, beneath the flourishes of colonial and neocolonial triumphalism, opposition has stirred at first in the form of secular nationalism and later in the shape of what has been called variously “political Islam,” “radical Islamism,” and “Islamo-nationalism,” that is, political movements grounded in religious interpretation but set in motion by foreign
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domination.10 The politics of political Islam have shown themselves to
be both postcolonial, in that they are a reaction to neocolonialism, and precolonial in that they seek to reproduce a kind of caliphal Camelot. Secular nationalism had remained triumphant until the 1970s, the decade that had begun with the death of Nasser. Political Islam, the Egyptian antecedents, of which I shall detail below, was its successor. It was the politics that rushed in to fill the void when secular politics, especially in its nationalist and socialist form, showed itself unable to resist the pressures of neocolonialism, and later, neoliberalism, right across the region from Algeria to Afghanistan. The advent of political Islam, chronicled in a thousand learned texts, came as a shock to Westerners, non-specialist, and academic pundits alike. Some of these, falling back on the older tropes of Orientalism, put its advent down to pathologies and atavistic urges inherent in Islam; others compared it to fascism in Europe. In any case, political Islam turned out to be the revenge on those who thought that after the death of the Soviet Union (c. 1990) history would quietly come to an end and a Titanic America would rule the waves. oligarchs
The riches of the Middle East, especially but not only its oil, have generally been owned not by its people but by handfuls of oligarchs, virtually all of whom seek to control wealth in their own interests and that of their collaterals and descendants. Perhaps there is nothing new here; the Iranian president, Mahmud Ahmadinejad, who sees himself as a defender of the rights of the wretched (mustaz’afin) and is not, strictly speaking, a reliable source of statistics, has parroted the claim that his country has been ruled by an oligarchy of a thousand families for centuries. The al-Saud family, at present (2012) comprising thousands of indolent princes, has constituted itself as an exaggerated form of a family oligarchy. On a smaller scale are the ruling families of the Gulf emirates like Kuwait and Qatar who squander and accumulate conspicuously and recklessly. As it had been in Egypt, no less than other developing states, throughout most of the twentieth century, the construction sector has been a juicy source of capital accumulation and a rich field for every variety of peculation. Alongside the kings, princes, princesses, and sheiks inhabiting palaces from Morocco to Dubai are a glittering collection of other beneficiaries of the mineral wealth of the Middle East. We may recall the
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bin Laden family, the numerous progeny of a shrewd, if illiterate, Yemeni building contractor. Collectively, the bin Laden family and their like may be seen as a courtly class, as opposed to the military or “praetorian” class represented by the likes of the family of Saddam Hussein, now apparently extinct, whose power came from the barrel of a gun. Military rulers, albeit somewhat less vicious, include the former leading families of Egypt and of Algeria, Libya, and Syria, a list that at one time included Mustafa Kamal of Turkey and the shah of Iran. As in the case of Iran, with a little luck and a certain longevity, praetorians might become princes; the shah, Muhammed Reza Pahlevi (r. 1943–80) was the son of a military strongman but his descendants, no longer uniformed, now live in a gilded exile in the United States. Saddam Hussein groomed his sons to succeed him, as did the rulers of a string of states including Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, Morocco, Libya, and even Pakistan. But not all sons proved to be as durable as their fathers. Finally, there is the priestly class – on the whole a comfortable and secure, but not usually opulent – that is part of the small middle class of the Muslim world. But, like the de Medicis of early modern Europe who spanned the bourgeoisie and the Papacy, there are exceptions. The Aga Khan IV, imam of the Ismaili branch of Shi’ism, whose family seat is traditionally in a posh suburb on the outskirts of Paris, is probably the best contemporary example of the alchemy whereby prayer is turned into gold through piety. In common with other Middle Eastern notables, the Aga Khan’s rise was assured by his recognition by an imperial power – in his case the British in 1887. But even anti-imperialists may apply the same wealth-generating formula. The occupation of Hashemi Ali-Akbar Rafsanjani, an ayatollah who was president of the Islamic Republic of Iran from 1989 to 1997, is described as “Hojjat al-Islam and Business.”11 He may actually be the richest man in the country. What we have here is something like Silvio Berlusconi as an archbishop. Anoushiravan Ehteshami makes the point that “in the late 1980s the top 10 per cent of households [in Iran] received nearly 42 per cent of the national income and the bottom 20 per cent only about 4 per cent … Rafsanjani’s policies have … sustained, even advanced the position of [the top stratum].”12 Writing over a decade later on the subject of the guardians of the Iranian revolution, Ray Takeyh is even more caustic: “It was during the Rafsanjani presidency that corruption became endemic. The new president’s penchant for self-enrichment, the granting of privileged access to a select few, and increasing class stratification undermined the Islamic Republic’s claim of virtuous governance. Just
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as during the shah’s era, tales of the ‘thousand families,’ dominating the economic realm became the order of the day.”13 Even given the global reach of neoliberal values there is nothing new here; since the days of the empires of Mesopotamia and Egypt there has always existed a class of self-engrossing priests. In fact, the very idea of the venial, overfed priest may be another of the many institutional inventions that have spread westwards from the Middle East. The nexus of wealth derived from minerals and profligacy of an astronomical order in the Middle East, however, goes back only to the beginning of our period: “In 1949 the king [of Saudi Arabia, Abd al-Aziz al-Saud (c. 1880–1953)] received around $90 million, paid mainly in gold; it is estimated that by November 1950 he received another $70 million. Officially these funds go to ‘raise the living standards’ of his people; in fact all but 10 percent, which he pays mainly to tribes to keep them quiet, goes into the bottomless pockets of the king, his immediate family and entourage.”14 Several but not all of the Middle Eastern oligarchies were anointed in power during the colonial period and have been offered protective alliances, usually in return for the security of oil supplies, by the great power of the day. Hence one of the sources of Middle East conflict: while the advocates of political Islam deplore foreign intervention, the rulers of the states that feed them, such as Saudi Arabia and those of the Gulf, are often sustained by non-Muslim outsiders. Where would the Saudis be without the Americans? One guess would be in exile, like the former rulers of Egypt and Iran, or perhaps in the grave, like the former rulers of Iraq and Libya. The system of externally backed oligarchies does seem vulnerable on several counts, the main one being the feebleness of their economic structures. While oligarchies often require considerable incomes on which to survive, few of the states on which they prey have solid economic bases. Thus, in sum, while oil continues to flow and oil prices remain high, the oligarchies remain secure and affluent. When the oil dries up, or oil prices diminish or, as in Iran or Indonesia, there is simply too much expenditure by elites, then crisis follows. egypt
Even in the recent epoch when it has been eclipsed by the garish wealth of Arabia and the revolutionary glamour of Iran, Egypt has retained its position as the intellectual and cultural heart of the Middle East. For this reason, domination of Egypt has remained a prize for foreign powers
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from Bonaparte to Bush. While accommodating Western ideologies of all sorts, nationalism, fascism, feminism, and communism included, Egypt has also remained a centre of resistance to foreign control – hence its role as a seed-bed for political Islam and as the second centre, after Tunisia, of revolution in 2011. In 1919, while the Ottoman Empire in the Arab lands was being torn apart, the Egyptians rose up against the British who had turned it from an Ottoman province to a British protectorate during the war. Although the British killed more than 800 Egyptians, it became apparent to London, where squeamishness regarding colonial slaughter had already been evident before 1914, that some greater degree of autonomy, embodied within some new kind of colonial arrangement, would have to be worked out if Britain’s dominance was to remain entrenched. The new colonial deal, that we might see as neocolonialism prefigured, was to be overseen by the British-approved Egyptian monarch working together with Egypt’s leading nationalist party, the Wafd, a collection of relatively liberal landowners, businessmen, lawyers, and other members of the country’s Westernized elite. But the Wafd advanced only haltingly since its political efficacy continued to be hobbled by the British through their ambassadors and by means of the considerable British garrison that was maintained in the country. “The British tended quietly to support the Palace in its efforts to curb the ambitions of the Wafd. They were also prepared to apply direct force when, in their view, the situation demanded it.”15 Egypt in the 1920s and ‘30s, when it was regarded as a “Veiled Protectorate,” was thus like other neocolonies that were nominally independent and yet effectively dependent; the mandates, Cuba, and the Philippines all come to mind. The Wafd was not alone in facing the British. In 1926 a religious party called al-Ikhwan al-Musilmin, the Muslim Brotherhood, was formed. The Brotherhood stood against Egypt’s pro-British landowners as well as the domination of Muslim lands, in general, by non-Muslims. Fundamentalist, puritanical, reactionary, and resolutely anti-Western and thus anti-revolutionary, it favoured religious renewal in the form of a return to the imagined values of Islam of the seventh century and clerical dictatorship. Whereas the Wafd provided some degree of support for Egypt’s nascent feminist movement, for instance, the Ikhwan, unsurprisingly, was entirely horrified of any form of women’s emancipation. The Brotherhood, influential today not only in Egypt but throughout the Middle East, was the genitor of the modern family of jihadi organizations that we call “political Islam.”
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Political Islam did not expand in a vacuum. It only secured a place in the Middle Eastern political firmament from the late 1970s, after the failure of the politics of secular nationalism, best represented by Nasserism. In fact, what we see here is not the extinction of one kind of political ideology but its mutation: “The same individuals who followed Nasser or Marx in the 1960s are Islamists today.”16 But some of the Islamists were there early, coeval with, and not descended from, the secular Wafdists and the communists. In Egypt this was the case of Hassan al-Banna (d. 1949), the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1926. Everywhere that men like him looked in the domains of Islam, from Morocco to the Ottoman Empire and through India to the East Indies, they saw only defeat and desolation. Even before him, in colonial India and elsewhere, others had recognized this, lamented, and sought means to combat it. Of course, the combination of religion and nationalism was not unique to the Middle East. Buddhists in Tibet and Southeast Asia, led often by monks rather than mullahs, also became nationalists. In fact, once it became apparent that gradualist, parlor nationalism of the Wafd or of Congress in India could never advance, nationalism was forced to ally with either religion or communism in order to prevail. The Muslim Brotherhood remained formidable from the 1920s to the early 1950s when it occupied a key role in mobilizing the Egyptian street against both the British presence in the cities and the web of bases on the western side of the Suez Canal that were the eastern version of Cuba’s Guantanamo. But when political power was seized from the Egyptian king, Faruq, by Gamal Nasser and his fellow Free Officers in 1952, secular socialists and étatists to the man, the Brotherhood came to be viewed as a rival centre of politics and its leaders accordingly persecuted, alongside the communists. Banning followed, as Nasser formed a close relationship with the Soviet Union. In Egypt as in Afghanistan, the secularists, communist or not, detested the Islamists. Reciprocally, socialism and communism were both anathematized as being Western and thus corrupt by the Brothers. Western-style reform liberalism, Nehru-ish patrician statism, or populism in the manner of Argentina, and even less any variety of gentle social democracy, hardly had a chance. In the early 1950s the leading light of political Islam in Egypt was Sayyid Qutb, an unrepentant radical who was martyred by Nasser in 1956. As a Third World socialist Nasser had an acquired taste for repression that he presumably picked up from the British on the one hand and the Stalinists of Eastern Europe on the other. Under him a
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gulag of concentration camps rose in the desert, execution was routinized, and torture, even of women, was normalized. After Nasser died in 1970 and his successor, Anwar Sadat, moved Egypt out of the gravitational pull of Moscow, away from solidarity with other Middle Eastern regimes and towards Washington, the Brotherhood, benefiting from a remission of state repression, rose to a new prominence. It is apparent that much of the appeal of the Brotherhood was connected to the relief it offered to the masses of urban Egyptians in the face of uncertain living standards and the in-your-face consumerism of the Westernized elite, not excluding the leading politicians and army officers. While we might assume that the Egyptians, as Muslims, were more given to Islamic solutions, it was impoverishment and inequality, perhaps more that piety and prayerfulness, that drove them to seek religious solutions. Inequality and even greater insecurity were magnified under Sadat, who had removed subsidies on bread and other staples in early 1977. In the food riots that followed, 171 were killed and hundreds injured. Among the Brothers, anti-Americanism flourished for several reasons. Most obvious was Washington’s unflinching support of Israel and the plight of the Palestinians. There was also Washington’s firm support of Egypt’s military elite – a part of the $2 billion a year in foreign aid that Washington lavished on Cairo and Cairo lavished on the military, at the head of which stood dictators like Sadat and, later, Mubarak. Egypt had become, in fact, one of Washington’s leading aid and loan recipients, second only after Israel: a Nilotic pillar of American power. Among Sadat’s besetting sins was his visit to Israeli-ruled Jerusalem in October 1977 in search of a Middle East peace settlement that might give him the credibility internationally that had evaded him domestically. The agreement he signed with the Israelis in March 1979 was the first between Israel and an Arab state. He hoped it would secure him a place as an international statesman and transform his listless popularity at home, yet he failed to secure any guarantee for Palestinian rights of self-determination. This, and the fact that the common front of Arab countries against the Zionist intruder and its American sponsor had now been breached, guaranteed him apostate status among thinking Arabs everywhere. Sadat was assassinated by a Muslim radical in 1981. “I have killed Pharoah,” he gloated.17 To pious Muslims “Pharoah” represented the excesses of the historical period before Islam – one of darkness, polytheism, and profligacy. After Sadat’s assassination no revolution followed.
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Qutb’s hopes for regeneration that had spread so widely in the 1960s and ‘70s remained stifled by repression. As in the case of Algeria in the 1990s, in the war between religious terror and state terror, the state with generous budget for spies and informers, its bristling arsenal of military hardware, its deep-pocketed foreign suppliers and its control of the media seemed likely to prevail. Sadat’s successor was another army officer, Muhammed Hosni Mubarak, who, from the 1980s, oversaw the continued decline of Egypt’s living standards and the triumph of those who sought to increasingly privatize the economy while binding the country to Washington, itself at the peak of its power over the Middle East. Then, in early 2011, in an astonishing shift that caused Middle East watchers to scratch their heads, first the rulers of Tunisia and then the Mubarak regime of Egypt were overthrown. Mubarak himself was arrested and investigated. What, then, of “Islamic fundamentalism”? Although by 1987 the Muslim Brotherhood had become the largest single opposition group in the National Assembly, Egypt remained far from Algeria, a country swamped by the bloody conflict between the army, commanded by the country’s secular ruling elite and the Muslims of the Islamic Front. In spite of the violence that visited some parts of Egypt in the 1990s, on the whole, “in 1995, a foreigner could live quite safely in Cairo; this was out of the question in Algiers.”18 Having made its debut as a force against British imperialism, the Brotherhood had over the decades become a populist but numerically limited movement against Western materialism and its beneficiaries, the businessmen and functionaries who were associated with the increasingly discredited, and apparently immoveable, ruling oligarchy. It remained implacably opposed to virtually all aspects of US foreign policy in the Middle East; the idea, promoted by Washington and echoed by its Western allies, especially from the early 1990s, that democracy and economic development should be prioritized among Arab regimes was viewed by the Brothers as a diabolical absurdity.19 They understood quite reasonably that developmentalism was Westernization in disguise. Although the Brothers failed to turn Egypt in the direction of righteousness, their influence in the Middle East remained persistent. (Osama bin Laden became a Brother while still at school in Saudi Arabia.) More importantly, the Muslim Brotherhood became the godfather of Hamas in Gaza and the West Bank. Yet, in the revolution of early 2011 that overthrew the Mubarak regime, it played a minor, indeed quite marginal, part.
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In the postwar years Islam was hardly perceived as being the threat to Western interests that it became in the 1980s. “Given the prominence of Islam in public life across much of the Arab world today, it is easy to forget just how secular the Middle East was in 1981.”20 In fact, Islam was seen as a safe bulwark against any kind of radical change. When it was explained in Washington in mid-1962 that King Faisal of Saudi Arabia had organized the World Islamic Society as an antidote to communism and even socialism of the Nasserite variety, the Americans applauded. Islam, they assumed, quite erroneously, could be used as a weapon by oligarchies against the secular ideologies of socialism and nationalism preached by their critics. What we have here, thus, is a fairly simple formula: colonialism had destroyed the anciens régimes but left the door open to nationalism, which in the Cold War period was often attracted by the siren call of Moscow; neocolonialism with its blather about modernization and development, attempted to block nationalism, undermining any secular politics that involved criticism of the West. The failure of secular nationalist politics, for largely economic reasons, as in Latin America, ultimately guaranteed the popularity of political Islam. There was obviously a misinterpretation here; the Western powers that strove to undermine secular nationalist politics assumed that Islam, especially in its hierarchical Sunni form, was an opiate. It wasn’t. But political Islam satisfied only a minority. It showed itself not to be a winner except under extraordinary circumstances, such as Afghanistan and Somalia. So the political situation right across the region has continued to be uncertain and unsustainable with the West, until 2011, at least, backing regimes that seem to guarantee the status quo and then, in a self-righteous chorus of denunciation, disavowing them, and, in the case of Libya, even turning to attack. iraq
Iraq, we have seen, was invented in 1921, carved out of the Arab territories of the Ottoman Empire on the basis of an agreement between the British and the French. Consistent with their belief in monarchy as the most desirable form of government, the British installed as rulers over the mandate a member of the Hashemite family, claimants to descent from the Prophet Muhammed and traditional rulers of the Two Holy Cities, Mecca and Medina. During World War I, British agents had persuaded the Hashemites to rebel against the Ottomans, promising them
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kingdoms in their own right. The Hashemite Faisal I (r. 1921–33) thus became the king of Iraq. With their control over of the king of Egypt and their influence in Iran and over the petty princes of the Gulf, the future of the Middle East looked very British indeed. The overwhelming majority of Iraq’s people, some 80 per cent, were Arab speakers; 15 per cent spoke Kurdish and the rest were mainly Turkomans who lived in the Kirkuk region. A commercially significant population of around 100,000 Jews lived in Baghdad. There were, as well, small communities of Christians, including the Assyrian Christians who were recruited in significant numbers into the British-run Iraqi army. Of the Arabs, the population was divided between a majority of Shi’as and a minority of Sunnis; in an official census taken between 1920 and 1931, the Shi’as were shown to comprise 55 per cent of the population, the Sunnis 22 per cent, and the Kurds 14 per cent. By 2008 the Shi’as numbered sixteen out of the total of twenty-seven million Iraqis. For the first half of the twentieth century, most of this population lived, in grim poverty, in the countryside where its members were ruled by landlords, often in the form of tribal chiefs. Under the Ottomans the Shi’as had been excluded from public office while their tribal leaders suffered from a decline in their authority. Under the British they were likewise kept away from power. “With the Sunnis in power, the British could control the country through them; with the Shi’is (sic) in power there could have been no British mandate.”21 One of the first problems of the Hashemite-ruled Iraqi state was that it did not exist in the eyes of its people. In 1933, the year after Iraq became officially independent according to the provisions of mandate rule, the king, Faysal I, complained, “In Iraq there is still … no Iraqi people, but unimaginable masses of human beings, devoid of any patriotic ideal, imbued with religious traditions and absurdities, connected by no common tie, giving ear to evil, prone to anarchy, and perpetually ready to rise against any government whatsoever.”22 The meaning of “independence” here was ambiguous. Before conferring it in 1933 the British forced the Hashemite monarchy to sign a treaty guaranteeing British sovereign rights to two huge bases, one at Habbaniyya, fifty miles from Baghdad and the other at Sha’iba, near Basra. From these two bases, together with the bases in the Canal Zone in Egypt, and those in Cyprus and Aden, the British were able to triangulate their domination of the oil fields of the Middle East and to guarantee “imperial communications,” that is, the air route to India. Of course they claimed they were defending the region from communism, but in reality
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they were defending it against the repossession by its owners, especially the Shi’as. In 1925, while they were still in full control, the British had secured a seventy-five-year oil concession for the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), which began production two years later. Iraqis owned no shares in the company but were rewarded with a trickle of royalties on the basis of the tonnage of oil extracted. The IPC was a nice complement to the British-owned Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC) on the other side of the Euphrates, which had begun production in 1909. Faysal I was succeeded by his son, Ghazi (r. 1933–39) and Ghazi by his son, Faysal II (r. 1939–58). The ruling dynasty of Iraq was, alas, a line with only three stops, one more, as we shall see, than the ruling Pahlevi dynasty of Iran. The fate of Middle East monarchies in the twentieth centuries, recalling the overthrow of Faruq of Egypt in 1952 and the Sanussis of Libya in 1969, offered little justification for complacency. Since Faysal II was only four years old when he inherited the throne, a regent was appointed to serve as the effective head of state. Real power was retained by a clique of politicians, the most durable of whom, Nuri al-Sa`id, was prime minister five times in the 1930s and again when the monarchy was overthrown in 1958. He and most of his cronies had been educated by the Ottomans, some having served in the Ottoman armies. All were Sunnis. The wealth and power that they appropriated allowed them to be assimilated to the ranks of the landed elite that they had no interest in dispossessing. As one historian of Iraq has explained, instead of ruling over the ancien régime, they were absorbed by it and thus had a stake in its perpetuation. By 1958, 60 per cent of Iraq’s cultivatable land was in the hands of the large landowners; in the same year there were one and a half million rural dwellers with no land at all. Also by the same date, six of the seven largest landowners were Shi’as. Thus, although the Shi’as were underrepresented in the state, they were hardly dispossessed. As in Pakistan and India, nationalism and the maintenance of the agrarian status quo were hardly incompatible. From the death of Faisal, Iraqi politics became characterized by struggles for power among the “feudal” landowning class with political parties being merely labels attached to interest groups. Army coups became commonplace – there were half a dozen by the end of the 1930s. When the army had relinquished power after each coup, possession of the office of prime minister became the stairway to a material heaven. Here, too, was a resemblance to both Pakistan and Turkey in the future.
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Excluded from the political process were the young army officers who had been trained in the Baghdad military college and who wrapped themselves in the new national flag. Some of these were idealists, others were no different from those in power, except that they longed for, rather than possessed, high office and its trappings. Most were secular. By the late 1930s, the appeal of fascism that had swept right across Europe had become undeniable. Iraq’s national director of education hoped that Iraq might become the Prussia of the Arab world with schoolboys trained in the sport of goose-stepping. On 1 April 1941 proAxis military leaders forced the pro-British Nuri from power and opened the door for the pro-German Rashid Ali al-Gaylani to become prime minister. All this of course alarmed the British, not because they had any inclination towards stimulating real democracy among their clients in the Middle East, but simply because fascism, like communism, was a threat to their own tenure. The British were hardly concerned that the majority Shi’a population was shut out of power. The Middle East in wartime being no place for political subtlety, they threw Rashid Ali out of power at gunpoint. Now, in common with King Faruq of Egypt, both Nuri and Rashid Ali had been discredited. Among the politically literate nationalists it was becoming evident that both monarchy and foreign domination would sooner or later have to go. After the defeat of Germany in 1945, Pan-Arab nationalism as well as communism spread rapidly, especially among the Sunnis. Both nationalists and communists demonstrated in January 1948 against the AngloIraqi Treaty of Portsmouth that sought to guarantee the British position in Iraq. The government fell. By the 1950s, street politics had become even more common and often reflected the radicalism of the Nasser regime in Egypt. The Iraqi government showed itself too weak to control the street. In 1958 the Iraqi nationalists followed the example of the Egyptians by overthrowing the monarchy; the golden glow of Nasserism had now reached its maximum wattage. For the Hashemites, unlike King Faruq, there was no sailing off to sensuous exile in a yacht packed with valuables; leading members of the royal family were slaughtered, as were their supporters and Nuri al-Sa’id. The leader of the coup was Brigadier Abd al-Karim Qasim (1914–1963). Qasim proclaimed that Iraq was from now to be a republic. Land reform, as in Egypt, was undertaken to break the power of the feudal class. This land reform was only partly completed while Qasim was in power, however, and the result was that an independent class of small landowners was stillborn.
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Following the 1958 revolution, two parties surfaced to dominate the political landscape: the nationalist Ba’ath and the Communists. Worse, at least as seen from the capitals of the West, the Iraqis moved in the direction of neutralism, withdrawing from the Washington-designed Baghdad Pact, which had been ostensibly intended as a kind of shield against Soviet expansion in the region but in reality was another means of entangling the Middle East in a web of American influence. Naturally, the removal of Iraq from the pact came as a painful blow. The Iraqi revolution of 1958 and the abandonment of Baghdad’s role in the eponymous pact marked the end of any British role in the Middle East and led Washington to the conclusion that a new system of control, based on Israel, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, together with as many other clients as could be mustered, would be necessary to keep the region secure. Qasim established a military dictatorship that lasted until 1963 when it was overthrown by a dissident faction of the army led by the Ba’athist Colonel Abd al-Salam Arif. The Ba’athists had cleared their conspiracy with the CIA before proceeding: “We came to power on a CIA train,” admitted the incoming Ba’ath interior minister.23 Washington was, of course, content to see the end of the nationalizer Qasim and the Ba’ath’s destruction of the Iraqi communist party, even though the new regime did not overturn the decree that nationalized Iraqi oil. Arif’s brother succeeded him, but his rule was short lived. He was overthrown in a coup organized by another faction of the ever-conspiring Ba’ath Party. The new government was headed by Hasan al-Bakr, who made himself both president and prime minister. The ruling clique around him was called the Revolutionary Command Council. Saddam Hussein, a cousin of al-Bakr, took over command of the security and intelligence services, that is, the secret police. His clansmen, members of the Bejat clan of the Albu Nasir tribe from the town of Tikrit, slipped into the high offices of the state. From 1979 Saddam became Iraq’s supreme ruler, staying in power until the US invasion of 2003. Under him the government of Iraq became notorious for two qualities – nepotism and violence. Largely neglected in the West were Iraq’s advances in health and public education. Ever since the revolution of 1958 the leaders of Iraq, of whatever political complexion, had tried to wrest control over the country’s oil resources from the British-owned Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC). The IPC had dug in its heels – increased profit-sharing to the benefit of the Iraqis was, in the view of its directors, unacceptable. In 1972 the Ba’ath
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Party had reacted simply and effectively – it nationalized all of Iraq’s oil. This proved to be a brilliant stroke; for it was not only highly popular but also highly profitable for the ruling regime. From this point, Iraq became a major player among the world’s oleocracies, the regimes whose leaders depended on oil wealth to maintain their power. William Cleveland outlines the sudden transformation that swept over the country, one which, coincidentally, took place at the moment of the oil price spike that was the consequence of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. Enriched by the tremendous influx of oil revenues, the regime was able to embark on an ambitious program of industrial development and social reform. The Ba’athists of Iraq … were committed to a socialist economy that allowed some scope for private enterprise. The public sector took the lead with investments in heavy industries as iron, steel, and petrochemicals. Although Iraqi industry suffered from low productivity because of a shortage of skilled labour and trained management, there was nevertheless sufficient progress to prompt some to predict that by the year 2000 Iraq would join the ranks of the minor industrial powers.24 Oil revenues not only facilitated economic development, they also enabled social transformation. In 1970 a new agrarian reform law limited the size of landholdings and authorized expropriations of large landholders. Between 1970 and 1982, 264,400 farmers received grants of land. As a consequence of land redistribution and the formation of co operatives, the power of the feudal elites, the so-called “old social classes,” was broken. In their stead rose an oil-based welfare state that featured subsidized food, free health care, and free education up to and including university level. By 1991 it had one of the best health services in the region. Ed Harriman has pointed out that Baghdad’s doctors and nurses provided care often comparable to that of their counterparts in Tel Aviv or Cairo. Naturally, as food became more assured and health measures more pervasive, the population as a whole began to enjoy benefits comparable to middling Latin American and even certain European states.25 Among the greatest beneficiaries of this socially progressive universe were women, for whom opportunities in education and employment opened up. “In 1978, amendments to the personal status law outlawed the practice of forced marriages, expanded the grounds on which women could obtain divorces, and made polygamy contingent upon obtaining the permission of a judge. Women’s access to education was
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also enhanced, and by 1982 over 30 percent of university students were female. The regime sought to attract women into the work force by setting up child-care centres offering paid maternity leave, and requiring equal pay for equal work.”26 A study of the role of women in contemporary Iraqi politics has verified that “Iraqi women have been among the most liberated of their gender in the Middle East.”27 If the new Iraq fell short of a Western state, it had come a long way since the days when the country was ruled by a landholding elite headed by corrupt and squabbling politicians and the profits from its oil resources flowed into the accounts of foreign shareholders. Yet, although Iraq remained a dictatorship, royal at first, and then republican, it had little in common with, say, the ersatz theocracies of Saudi Arabia and Iran, the latter which we shall consider below. Perhaps, at its best, it resembled the brutal, if ultimately effective, developmentalist dictatorship of South Korea under Park Chung Hee (r. 1961–79), but with oil revenues cushioning the need for the furious exploitation of the working class. Iraq, run by a small tribe of Ba’athist functionaries who had made their way to the top of the pile through cronyism and slippery opportunity, was a slowly evolving model of economic and social, if not political, development. But there was a problem. Iraq’s rulers were far from the kind of cosmopolitans that might have risen over the longer term – and did in Istanbul and Cairo. Having ascended the social ladder in just one or two decades, they were rude provincials with little political experience outside their homeland and certainly no war-waging capacity. This, in part at least, explains the foreign-policy disasters, especially the war with Iran that lasted from September 1980 to the spring of 1988. It was the cost of this war that led Saddam to invade Kuwait in 1990, and brought down the American holocaust on the heads of the Iraqi people, which has lasted for two decades. We shall see more of this below. iran
The assiduous propagation of a conservative brand of Islam in Saudi Arabia and the tepid acceptance of religious reform in countries like Egypt were both overtaken by the wildfire spread of radical Islamic nationalism, by any other name, in Iran. This took, above all, the form of resistance to the rule of the pro-American shah, Muhammed Reza Pahlevi (r. 1941–79) and the government of that country by an elite that depended to a large extent upon his favour.
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The shah, unlike the rulers of Egypt or Iraq, was conspicuously the product of American machinations. Washington had contrived to overthrow the democratic and secular prime minister of Iran, Muhammed Mossadeq, in 1953. Mossadeq was a liberal nationalist from an old aristocratic family – more of a Nehru than a Nasser. The US president, Eisenhower, however, had become persuaded that he was a “pinko,” that is, a communist supporter because the communist party of Iran, the Tudeh, supported him. At first, Washington and London boycotted Iranian oil, as they were later to boycott Iraqi oil. Then the CIA, with the assistance of British intelligence, spread money around the country, buying crowds and military leaders. Street protest and a coup followed. Mossadeq was toppled, and members of the Tudeh liquidated in large numbers, as reformers were later to be from Indonesia to Honduras. “Over five decades later, in 2006, the Bush administration asked congress to appropriate $75 million for democracy-promotion programs in Iran. Congress responded by funding them at a slightly lesser level of $66.1 million. That is, the US government opined that its dearest wish for Iran was the establishment of a parliamentary democracy, just like the one the Eisenhower administration had overthrown.”28 The shah had been marginalized, in the late 1940s, in the process of the democratization of Iranian politics. Now, after the CIA coup put paid to democracy, he stepped out of the shadows to replace Mossadeq. Yet, there were problems, insignificant at first, but growing with time as Islamism spread throughout the whole of the Middle East. That the shah’s regime was secular – like those of Egypt and Iraq – was the principal question, among several, that the flow of oil could not staunch. The Americans were the second problem. Not only was Iran a key Cold War US ally in the Middle East, but it was one saturated by a US military presence. The Americans, as in Japan in the period of Occupation, benefited from “extra-territoriality,” that is, exemption from national law. More to the point, The United States … helped train [the shah’s] secret police, and enabled one of the more repressive capitalist dictatorships in modern history. The shah became more and more megalomaniacal, favoring gaudy costumes that would have put a Las Vegas lounge lizard to shame. He built up a coterie of billionaire cronies, while millions of villagers, unable to get government loans for their small farms, were forced to migrate as day laborers to squalid urban slums. A massive apparatus of domestic spying and surveillance
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filled the shah’s jails with prisoners of conscience. The shah began assaulting, in the name of secular nationalism and the monarchy, key symbols of Islam.29 Under the shah, Iran’s considerable religious establishment was thus put on a short leash. Whereas the kings of Saudi Arabia represented themselves as benefactors of Islam, that is, of the clerical establishment, and protectors of religion against foreign ideologies, the shah, increasingly from the 1960s, was represented by the clerical establishment as an enemy of Islam and a tyrant who oppressed the masses of poor Iranians, the mustaz`afin. The clerics, who came in substantial numbers from traditional clerical families, did indeed have something to worry about since the shah had replaced many members of the `ulama-dominated judiciary with lay judges. The protest movement against the shah was thus a form of counterrevolution against the American form of secularism. The destruction of the shah was the opportunity for the establishment clerics to regain much of their power. The revolution, while it destroyed the Americanized ruling group, preserved the monopoly of the conservative clerical elite and, to a large extent, its business allies. The ties between the mosque and the bazaar, which were often familial, were rebuilt by the revolutionary regime. The most outspoken of the clerics was Ayatollah Ruhollah Mousavi Khomeini,30 a distinguished scholar within the Shi’ite establishment who, unlike others of his class, both reached out to the masses of his listeners and commented on everyday politics using a language that stressed the Western exploitation of the Third World and the complicity of a tyrant whose rule was essentially in the interest of the few – and the Americans. There had never been in the twentieth century another figure that carried the same political weight within a universe that was not merely religious but that argued for government by jurists; instead of “power to the people” as radicals in the 1960s once cried, Khomeini and his followers advocated “power to the clergy” (vilayat-i-faqih). “A stream of speeches denouncing the shah’s excesses, protesting the inequalities of his economic modernization plans, and deprecating Iran’s alliance with the United States made the imam, as his followers increasingly called him, the central figure in his country’s political drama. Through his undisputed charisma, incorruptible nature, and adroit use of leftist and religious slogans, he appealed to the Iranian people’s Islamic and nationalistic identities. As the revolution unfolded, all eyes were fixed on Khomeini, the acknowledged leader of a vast coalition of disaffected Iranians.”31 But
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for the foot soldiers of the Iranian Revolution, like the poor of Egypt or Algeria, it was their poverty as much as their piety that made the flamboyant squandermania of the shah’s regime stink. Here was the third problem of the shah’s regime. In few countries of the Third World was wealth distribution so exaggerated as in Iran; even the Pentagon recognized that this had brought the country to the boiling point. Between 1973 and 1975 alone “the income share of the richest 20 per cent of the urban population had grown from 57 to 63 per cent … After two decades, Iran still had one of the worst infant mortality and doctor-patient rates in the Middle East. It also had one of the lowest percentages of the population in higher education. Moreover, 68 per cent of adults remained illiterate, 60 per cent of children did not complete primary school … By the 1970s, there were more Iranian doctors in New York than in any city outside Tehran. The term ‘brain drain’ was first attached to Iran.”32 To the dismay of foreign affairs and developmental commentators in the West, in 1979 the shah was overthrown by forces under the control of the ayatollah and his followers. Over the next decade the clerics utterly destroyed all rival groups, especially those on the left, some of which had attempted to combine Islam with contemporary political ideologies. A final slaughter came in 1988 when the clerics turned to the prisons and hanged 2,800 prisoners, whom Amnesty International called “prisoners of conscience.” “Leftists were executed for ‘apostacy’ on the grounds that they had turned their backs on God, the Prophet, the Koran, and the Resurrection … This extraordinary bloodbath has one plausible explanation. Khomeini, in his dying years, was eager to leave behind disciples baptized in a common bloodbath. The killing would test their mettle, weeding out the half-hearted from the true believers, the weak-willed from the fully committed, and the wishywashy from the resolute. It would force them to realize that they would stand or fall together.”33 With the destruction of the shah’s regime, the flames of anti- Americanism, which rose to new heights as the 1970s progressed, continued to be fanned by a pumped-up clerical hysteria: “Death to America” and “Down with the Great Satan” became the chants of his foot soldiers. In November 1979, the US embassy in Tehran was occupied by the ayatollah’s supporters. American officials were turned into hostages. The shock felt right across the United States was palpable; bewildered self-righteousness, underpinned by innocence, and massaged by the media, peaked: “How could they do that to us?” But there was worse to come over the next decades.
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In the meantime, the Americans revenged themselves on the overthrow of the shah’s regime by supporting the invasion of Iran by Iraq in 1980. For nearly a decade, from 1980 to 1988, Washington threw its weight behind Saddam Hussein as a counterweight to the clerics who ruled the neighbouring Iran. Over this decade some 262,000 Iranians and 105,000 Iraqis were killed. Again, as on many earlier occasions, the tactic of divide and rule was useful. The US-supported invasion of Iran was sustained by military aid from the conservative monarchies of the Gulf; Kuwait gave Saddam $50 billion worth of assistance and Saudi Arabia $60 billion. Tactically successful to the extent that the ayatollah’s revolution was prevented from exploding beyond the borders of Iran into Iraq or the Gulf, the Iraqi invasion of Iran however failed on two major counts. First, it further fuelled Muslim anger against America and its allies, and second, it led Saddam Hussein to believe that the Americans would tolerate his domination of Gulf oil production. Yet, in spite of the sacrifices and the martyrdom, while there had been a coup in Iran, there was no revolution. The shah and his cronies were driven into exile or killed and their enemies had seized power. But the economic essence of Iran had not changed; capitalism had shifted gears but survived regime change. This should have come as no surprise; for the ayatollah himself had asserted that the president of the Islamic Republic and the bazaaris were brothers and promised that “as long as there is Islam there will be free enterprise.”34 By the time of the Iranian Second Republic, the year of the ayatollah’s death in 1989, the country was firmly in the hands not only of conservative clerics but, simultaneously, an elite that believed in business as usual. “It is perhaps ironic that since Ayatollah Khomeini’s death Iran’s new leaders have sought to re-establish as far as possible the economic (as well as some of the politico-military) ties that existed between Iran and the West during the shah’s regime.”35 The same elite had no misgivings about engrossing its collective self; after the briefest of intermissions, venality was back and the chasm between rich and poor began again to widen. In the late 1980s the top 10 per cent of households received nearly 42 per cent of the national income and the bottom 20 per cent only about 4 per cent; by the early 1990s, the share appropriated by the top stratum increased. “After parliamentary elections in 1992, under the leadership of the … Supreme Guide, Seyed Ali Khameini … the government reversed the nationalizations, which had reached their high-water mark in 1982, and sold off state-owned industries in the industrial and service sector. This
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approach was consistent with the development plan for 1994 that stressed privatization and marketization of the economy, including the liberalization of foreign trade.”36 The government adopted macroeconomic policies favoured by the IMF and encouraged by the World Bank. It welcomed foreign investors. The stock market in Tehran was opened. By early 1995 Coke and Pepsi, formerly denounced, had returned. So in spite of the rantings of the mullahs against the West, Iran had now been integrated into the world of neoliberalism: New York had thus become, like Karbala, a Holy Place, and Wall Street, a Holy Way. By the mid-1990s messianism had run out of steam. Controlling 80 per cent of the economy, the clerics had shown themselves to be not merely reactionary but often idle, incompetent, and corrupt. Agriculture had stagnated and small-scale industry was stifled. Effective social reform, in the form of better housing, education, and public health had only mixed successes. The condition of women was appalling; the protection of their rights as guaranteed by the family protection laws of 1967 and 1975 had been repealed; polygamy was back and unilateral divorce was again legally sanctioned. Under President Rafsanjani (r. 1989–97), probably the richest man in the country and the leader of the country’s business class, the “free-market” economy expanded. Abbas Amanat confirms the “corruption and racketeering of the Islam Republic’s elite, the failure of economic policies and industrial projects, massive institutional and individual kleptocracy, the striking levels of drug addiction, prostitution and other social ills [and] political suppression.”37 The clergy and their allies, led by President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, in office since August 2005, have had to resort to repression and terror on top of the usual doses of religious obscurantism, to keep a population disappointed over domestic decline and international isolation under control. With the events of 11 September 2001 and the war on terror that followed, the view that Muslim Iran, in spite of its distinctive Shi’ite ideology, is a threat to the West and like Iraq and Afghanistan, would have to be bombed and invaded once again, became popular in the US. “Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran,” warbled the presidential candidate John McCain, the man who had, on an earlier occasion, bombed Hanoi. armageddon and aftermath
In the aftermath of the 1980–88 Iraq-Iran war Saddam Hussein militarized his country further, spending millions on arms. In the end he
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had an army that was up to speed by the standards of the 1980s. In 1990 it still looked good; by 2003, however, it was showing signs of obsolescence. On 2 August 1990, just two years after the end of the war with Iran, Saddam’s armies, misreading American consent, invaded Kuwait. It was pushover; the Kuwaiti army was non-existent. Kuwaitis were better shoppers than soldiers. Iraq now claimed the kingdom as its nineteenth province. More importantly, it controlled an enormous share of the world’s oil supply. Washington was outraged. After six months of noisy declamations about freedom and wild comparisons of Saddam Hussein to Adolf Hitler, the United States attacked Iraq. The one-sided air war that followed was staged from Saudi Arabia, the ruler of which, King Fahd, “Custodian of the Two Holy Places,” had invited the Americans to establish bases in his kingdom. Pious Muslims were maddened. Saddam hit the nail on the head when he called the Saudi kingdom an American protectorate and proclaimed the Saudis unfit to protect the Holy Places. Fahd, given that he may have been the region’s most profligate monarch since the departure of King Faruq, with the Americans at his side, remained unmoved by Iraqi criticism. The air war against Iraq began on 16 January 1991, and, by means of ceaseless pounding, the country’s infrastructure was pulverized. This meant, of course, that hospitals were forced to function without power and water for sanitation, and clean drinking water was unavailable. The ground war fought by American units invading from the south lasted a mere 100 hours before the poorly armed and demoralized Iraqi troops surrendered. Those in Kuwait sought safety in flight back to Iraq. On the highway from Kuwait to Basra, Iraq’s second city, along which much of the Iraqi army retreated, the slaughter of the retreating army was stupendous. The Americans referred to the annihilation of the retreating Iraqis as a “turkey shoot.” On 27 February, the US president, George H.W. Bush, proclaimed Kuwait liberated and ordered an end to hostilities. By this time the Kurdish north of Iraq had freed itself from the rule of Baghdad; an independent Kurdistan, effectively a new state protected by Washington’s guarantees, now rose from the ashes of the crushed Iraq. In March 1991 the Shi’as to the south, in response to the American president’s call “to take matters into their own hands, to force Saddam Hussein … to step aside,” launched an intifada. But the rebels were not given the US support they had counted on and were crushed by still-intact units of the Iraqi army. “Hundreds of thousands died and no Iraqi Shiite I know thinks this failure of US support was anything but
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intentional,” said Peter Galbraith.38 Saddam and his lieutenants however lived to fight another day. It would not be for another dozen years that the final doom of his regime would be sealed. On 11 September 2001, passenger jets, hijacked by men of mainly Saudi origin, were flown into the twin World Trade Towers in New York and the Pentagon, the headquarters of the US military, in Washington. Some 3,000 Americans were killed and the world, watching on television, was aghast. “Islamicists,” the followers of a diabolical ideology that neoconservatives called “Islamofascism,” were held to blame. Retaliation was imperative. Within a few hours of the attack on New York and Washington, American intelligence had identified al-Qaeda, the organization that we have already seen emerging in Afghanistan in 1994, as behind the travesty. At the helm of the organization appeared the Saudi dissident, Osama bin Laden, now resident somewhere in the caves of the Tora Bora mountains between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Osama’s videoed presentations showed him weeping with joy while waving his Kalashnikov and offering prayers of thanksgiving for the effective destruction of the American landmarks. He promised further revenge on “Crusaders” and Jews. The American response was awkward. First, they bombed Afghanistan and destroyed, or at least dispersed, the Taliban army. Having failed to liquidate Osama, they turned away from Afghanistan altogether and back to Iraq. What seemed certain, at least to the recently re-elected regime of President George W. Bush, son of President George H.W. Bush, was that there was a firm connection between al-Qaeda and Iraq. Worse, claimed Washington, Saddam Hussein, in cahoots with al-Qaeda, was conspiring to build weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) of several sorts – chemical, in the form of poisonous gases; bacteriological, in the form of deadly viruses; and nuclear, in the form of explosive devices. Paul Wolfowitz, deputy defence secretary, who had in the 1990s advocated American interventions globally, told journalists that the WMDs were the one issue that everyone could agree upon in the White House, and the core reason for the war against Iraq. The president himself claimed, “We found the weapons of mass destruction.” But both were lying, as was Tony Blair, the British prime minister who supported the attack on Iraq. There were no WMDs; nor was there any connection between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda. Governments like those of Canada, France, and Germany wisely stayed clear of the expedition of Bush and Blair.
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The story of Washington’s claims and the willingness of certain of America’s allies to act on such claims and join in the invasion of Iraq came to form a significant strand in the American political narrative of the early 2000s. Following a propaganda offensive from the White House, supported by a chorus of assent from Downing Street, the Iraqis were once again subjected to bombing and invasion. The Iraqi infrastructure, partly rebuilt, was again ravaged and its armies crushed and disbanded. The health system that had been the pride of the country lay in ruins; the water, sewage, and irrigation infrastructure were torn apart. With the health ministry’s budget reduced by 90 per cent, the UN and World Bank agreed that it would need $1.6 billion just to resume normal operations. Iraq’s new ruling body, the American-dominated Coalition Provisional Authority set aside less than a quarter of that. On 1 May 2003, landing on the deck of an aircraft carrier in a fighter jet off the coast of California, the US president declared the end of “major combat operations.” Over the flight deck of the carrier a sign had been hoisted: “Mission Accomplished.” In Iraq, with the evaporation of the Saddamite state, civil war broke out between Sunni and the Shi’a militias. Thousands more were massacred. In the seven and a half years of the Iraqi war, to mid-2010, at least 100,000 Iraqis had been killed while two million were displaced inside the country and another 2.2 million were refugees in neighbouring countries. In April 2006 Nouri Kamal al-Maliki took power at the head of a Shi’ite-Kurdish coalition. The Americans made one last attempt at pacifying the country. Bolstering the quilt of forces under their command – US soldiers, allies, mercenaries from far and wide, Iraqi soldiers – they launched a “surge.” Thomas E. Ricks, the historian of the surge writes, “At the end of 2008 two years into the revamped war, the fundamental problems facing Iraq were the same ones as when it began.”39 On 27 November 2008 the Iraqi parliament approved a security treaty, the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), by which the 150,000 US troops would evacuate Iraqi towns and cities by June 2009 and withdraw from all of Iraq by the last day of 2011. Patrick Cockburn of The Independent testified that The Status of Forces Agreement … signed after eight months of rancorous negotiations, is categorical and unconditional. America’s bid to act as the world’s only super-power and to establish quasicolonial control of Iraq, an attempt that began with the invasion of 2003, has ended in failure … Even Iran, which denounced the first
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drafts of the SOFA, fearing that an agreement would enshrine a permanent US presence in Iraq, now says that it will officially back the new security pact … a sure sign that America’s main rival in the Middle East sees the accord as marking the end of the occupation and the end of any notion of Iraq being used as a launching-pad for military assaults on its neighbours.40 The regimes of George W. Bush and Tony Blair had meanwhile only been slightly grazed. As millions of Iraqi refugees began the long trek home to a ruined country, both walked away from public office enriched and unscathed, neither admitting to the calamity they had unleashed. In the words of one analyst, “America will have bequeathed a highly unstable state to the Middle East and a great deal of suffering to the Iraqi people, for nothing.”41 Polls in the United States in mid-2010 confirmed the view that the war was a mistake that was not worth American lives. In the “War on Terror” fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, 6,000 servicemen and women had lost their lives, and over 42,000 had been wounded. More than 3,000 allied soldiers had died, among them 158 Canadians killed in Afghanistan.
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9 Africa Independent: Peaks of Progress, Troughs of Despond Written in the shadow of the gathering crises that hover over Africa’s institutions and society today, [this book] faces squarely the many disappointments and breakdowns – social, economic and political – that have dulled the hopes of the early successes of the post-colonial period. Yet, for all the sorrows of Africa in the 1990s, Davidson shows how much has been achieved since decolonization. As independent Africa becomes more truly African with the passing years, away from the inappropriate systems and alien structures of her former masters, many of the long-term solution to her present problems are developing organically within her. Basil Davidson, Can Africa Survive? With an average per capita income of roughly US$1 a day, sub-Saharan Africa remains the poorest region in the world. Africa’s real per capita income today is lower than in the 1970s, leaving many African countries at least as poor as they were forty years ago … [While] the number of the world’s population and proportion of the world’s people in extreme poverty fell after 1980, the proportion of people in sub-Saharan Africa living in abject poverty increased to almost 50 per cent. Dambisa Moyo, Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa
introduction
By the early 1990s even in the view of Basil Davidson,1 the first of the two writers cited above, and the doyen of anglophone Africanists, Africa was a disaster on a unique scale. Long since disappeared was the élan associated with independence. Now what remained was an inventory of failure, avarice, and worse – corrupt elections, consistent political
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malfeasance, economic retrogression, the stain of spreading poverty and disease, civil war, and unshakeable dependency on foreign governments and firms. Virtually no states in sub-Saharan Africa were as well off in the 1990s as they had been in the 1960s. Despondency concerning Africa’s fate is reflected in the literature of lamentations that bemoans conspiracy, betrayal, victimization, and despair, with optimism ascending briefly from the 1960s into the mid-1970s, faltering thereafter, rising in the early 1990s with the end of apartheid and relapsing again. We can trace the peaks of progress and the troughs of despondence in key works of fiction and history, the lineal, if not immediate, descendants of Joseph Conrad’s 1902 Heart of Darkness.2 We see, thus, right after hopeful beginnings, betrayal and despair. Optimism, thus, as Dilip Hiro has said about US hegemony at the beginning of the twenty-first century, seemed so over.3 A step behind the lamentations regarding national and continental fates have come the troubled eulogies for developmentalism, or at least its core component, aid.4 And then a sigh of resigned comment from the Financial Times in June 2012: “After decades of outside assistance, the continent is as dependent as ever on the whims of foreign donors.” The one exception to this litany of despondency is the 2011 publication by the World Bank’s Charles Kenny, titled Getting Better – a cheery narrative of progress unsullied by self-interest.5 genesis
The genesis of independent Sub-Saharan Africa is to be found in 1957, with the independence of the British West African colony known as the Gold Coast. Among those few in the West who actually thought seriously about Africa, this was the occasion of a release of a dizzying wave of euphoria; a new world seemed to be rising from the ashes of timeless stagnancy and exploitation. Young people especially wanted to surf the wave, to go to Africa and assist in the heroic task of what was becoming known as “development,” or to study the new continent, which seemed, beneath the wallpaper of imperial self-congratulations, not only to have a politics but even a history, one that demonstrated that Africa, too, had an antiquity and even a kind of modernity with states, trade, and heroes. Bliss it was to be alive and to be young, the very heaven.6 By 1975 when Portugal’s African colonies were released virtually all of the continent was free and ostensibly under African direction. If we argue that most of Africa became independent in the two decades
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between Ghanaian independence and that of Angola and Mozambique, that is, between 1957 and 1975, then it becomes evident that by 2012 most of the states of Africa have had about fifty years of autonomous experience – perhaps, as we shall see, taking account of neocolonialism, not fifty years of effective autonomy but fifty years of recognizable existence. Before that, Africa was represented as a black hole, a timeless political nullity, almost in its entirety ruled by foreigners and written into their imperial histories – mainly British foreigners but also French, Belgian, Portuguese, and Spanish outsiders, alongside a race of creoles known as Afrikaners whose ancestors had emigrated from the Netherlands and France to the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa from the middle of the seventeenth century. Yet beyond South Africa, foreign rule was not actually long established. Until the late nineteenth century, except for tiny coastal enclaves, there were barely more than a few hundred foreigners along the whole coast from Senegal to Angola, likewise between Mozambique and Somalia. Most of Africa, like the populous and well-developed region that became colonial Northern Nigeria, for instance, was not brought under colonial rule until around 1900 and was independent again in 1960. Compare this to India of Ceylon, the most celebrated of British colonial possessions. India had come under British control from the middle of the eighteenth century and remained under foreign rule until the middle of the twentieth. Various foreigners held sway over parts of Ceylon (Sri Lanka) for nearly four centuries. British rule over Northern Nigeria, indeed, over most of Nigeria, was but a moment – indeed, a single lifetime. Such a trite observation may be justified for two reasons: first, that most of Africa was colonized only briefly, and thus lightly, at least compared to India and Mexico, and, second, that the independence of most of Africa has by now (2012) been experienced for about half as long as colonial rule was endured. By no stretch of imagination thus can we say that the normal state of Africa is that of being dominated. Most of Africa, for most of the modern period, has been free from foreign rule. But did any meaningful kind of political independence of Africa ever exist? Was independence actually lost? In fact, sub-Saharan Africa prior to the first European incursions in the middle of the fifteenth century certainly had a history but, with a couple of striking exceptions, was devoid of durable states of any kind. Those, like “ancient” Ghana, Mali, and Songhai in the Niger Bend region of Mali, had existed, but they had been destroyed centuries before modern colonialism – indeed, before
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the beginning of the modern period of history (c. 1500 CE). True, Ethiopia was eternal, or, at least, antique, and there had been a major state south of the Congo that the Portuguese effectively destroyed – rather like the Spanish had destroyed the state of the Mexica. The Hausa states of northern Nigeria and Benin to the south were, too, centuries old but they were, by comparison to states in Southeast or South Asia, quite simple, and for the most part, even compared to states in Mexico, virtually illiterate. The Sokoto Caliphate that emerged in the early nineteenth century was an exception; it sustained a literati that communicated in Arabic and was supported by a string of statelets with their own capitals and courts. The domestic slave trade was essential to their existence. Whether the caliphate and its subordinate emirates might have matured to resemble the medieval states of Asia had colonialism not intervened is a matter for speculation. And then, in the late nineteenth century, overlaying this gelatinous situation, Europeans created a grid of colonies large and small: Sudan, Algeria, Nigeria, Angola, Ethiopia, and the Congo occupied more than a quarter of the continent and, while artificial, were potentially viable. British Kenya, German and then British Tanganyika, Belgian Congo, and Portuguese Mozambique were the size of most European states. They were surrounded by smaller and often landlocked colonies that took up a mere one per cent of the continent. In fact, only on the tiny islands of the Pacific and the Caribbean were there states with populations so small and economies so marginal as the African mini-colonies – Gambia, Portuguese Guiné, Togo, Benin, Mali, Niger, Chad, Equatorial Guiné, Rwanda, Burundi, Lesotho, Swaziland, and Malawi. It was these mini-colonies that would, after independence, and barring the fortuitous discovery of such resources as oil, be forced to live from hand to mouth on foreign aid handouts. While obviously colonialism didn’t invent Africa, it did give form and content to it in political and economic terms. While the colonialists’ predecessors, the great cartographers of the centuries after the sixteenth, outlined the physiognomy of the African continent, it was the colonialists themselves who drew the lines on the maps that became the boundaries as we know them. If in Asia colonial structures were raised on ancient foundations and were sustained by indestructible patterns of trade and culture, including literacy, in Africa such structures had existed only evanescently; politically speaking, Africa had quite suddenly became a trailer park with states towed in by foreigners and parked on greenfield spaces in the savanna or the rain forest. If we think
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of Mesopotamia/Iraq or India or Afghanistan or Korea, we realize how their boundaries are, to a large extent, natural. Virtually no continental African state has natural boundaries. And no sub-Saharan African state has its present frontiers etched by African hands. Egypt is the exception. Having towed their states on to African lands, and parked them, Europeans also improvised modern African social and political systems to in order to effectively rule over them, sometimes on the basis of models from elsewhere; in the British case, India proved a handy example. The capitalist economy of Africa that was constructed gradually from the mid-nineteenth century was designed to fit the needs of industrializing Europe; Africans were encouraged, or forced, to build infrastructures and grow or harvest commodities, such as cotton and rubber, that facilitated capitalist development and profit-making in Portugal or Britain. All African roads and railways in colonial Africa ultimately ended at ports that were built to export raw materials to Europe; there was no Silk Road over which high-end luxury goods were shipped across Africa; trans-African highways were non-existent. Before colonial trade, the main export from Africa had been slaves, dispatched across the Sahara or the Atlantic. The slave trade, organized by Maghrebians, Egyptians, Arabs, Europeans, and Africans themselves, was simultaneously the basis and the bane of African economic development. Nowhere else on earth suffered a commerce so malevolent, over such a territorial extent, for such a long duration as was visited on the African continent.7 The development of Africa over the first colonial decades was hardly a burning question in the minds of the continent’s new proprietors; Africa, they obviously thought, was a continent where peasants toiled in timeless routines in the sun or in mines to produce food or raw materials for one or other imperial economy. Period. Thus, if you were on the colonial side, you wouldn’t see much point in education or elections or inoculations, although you might nudge the transport network or allow missionaries to make Christians out of heathens (but not Muslims, who were out of bounds on account of their proven abilities, when threatened, to organize holy wars against non-believers). For purposes of systematizing their rule, the Europeans adapted social forms from elsewhere. Africans were thus tagged as belonging to certain races (Semites, Hamites, Nilotics, Bushmen), tribes (Yorubas, Zulus, Kikuyus), and religious allegiances (Muslims and Christians, in several varieties, and polytheists, disparaged as “pagans”). Most indelible was the matter of tribes; different tribes were given different essential
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qualities. Some were stigmatized as being more warlike, others more commercial, some more willing to accept Christianity and thus Western education, others “raw heathens” who were virtually beyond redemption. All colonial regimes had scales of tribal preference; certain tribes could be trusted (especially with modern firearms), and were particularly respected. Other tribes were hopelessly backward and were doomed to eternities of really odd practices, dutifully graded, catalogued, and photographed. If Asia was a museum, Africa was a zoo in which the inmates, besides spectacular megafauna, included humans. When African independence eventuated, tribalism became the drug that stimulated regional disparities and enervated national coherence. Its affects became more acute as state revenues declined, and in some places, especially in the 1990s, it became a lethal element in politics. This was notoriously the case in Burundi and Rwanda, both of which were swept by genocides, but also in Kenya and the Sudan.8 Unlike parts of Europe or Asia where tribes had been assimilated into nations, in Europe’s African colonies, they were celebrated for their distinctiveness. The Europeans designed socioeconomic relations as well; labourers from the interior were herded to the coastlands of Ivory Coast to work on the cocoa plantations; landless peasants were forced to labour on coffee plantations in Kenya for settlers (the colonial government wouldn’t allow Africans to plant independently); mine labourers were compelled to move from one colony to another, the Portuguese colonists of Mozambique actually selling their subjects to recruiters from the mining centres of South Africa. Simultaneously, there was an almost complete absence of attempts to educate Africans beyond the lowest levels – in some colonies even up to a low level. Missionaries did what colonial governments abjured; Canadian Protestants taught Angolans in Portuguese, Quebec Catholics taught Malawians in English and Senegalese in French. Everywhere catechists were taught piety, obedience and, like talibs, rote babbling of memorized scripture. Obviously few of these missionary protégés were equipped at independence to deal with such arcane matters as industrial policy or balance of payments, nor had any ceased being “tribesmen.” In fact, “detribalization” was a great fear among colonial rulers; in Europe while peasants became Frenchmen, in Africa peasants always remained Hausas or Luos. To reiterate: Africa was formatted, mapped, investigated, tagged, priced, and regulated by Europeans who scrambled to grab territories
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and then, in less than a century and often in unseemly haste, packed up and went home. Odd Arne Westad, historian of the Cold War, commented, “For the great majority of colonized areas, especially in Africa, liberation was a stunningly quick process. In the five years from 1957 to 1962 alone, twenty-five new states were created, in most cases after only a few years of preparation. Very often the postcolonial elite moved directly into the state that the colonial powers had set up … The whole entity that the new leaders were trying to fill with their own content was a colonial construct; its borders, its capital city, its official language. It was from the beginning … an ‘imported state.’”9 Joseph E. Stiglitz, Nobel laureate and World Bank executive, recalls, I was in East Africa during the early days of independence, in the late 1960s. There was a sense of euphoria, although the countries knew that colonialism had left them ill-prepared for development and democracy. They didn’t have even a modicum of experience in self-government – there were few trained individuals, and the countries lacked the infrastructure for growth. In Uganda, the British had promoted Idi Amin within the military and so groomed him to be one of the leaders of the future. But Britain’s legacy stood bright and shining, when compared to the bloody history of Belgium’s activities in the Congo.10 After less than a century of improvised, inconsistent, and often bumbling colonial rule, often mediated by paternalism, independence came – actually, was imported – and the continent’s fate was put in the eager hands of a small and select number of Africans. Educated and politically experienced Africans were a rarity. “Throughout most of Africa today, you can count the number of effective African businessmen on two hands,” wrote Barbara Ward, a leading British development economist of the 1960s.11 When I arrived as a teacher in the British-designated region of Northern Nigeria in 1962 – two years after Nigeria’s independence – Europeans still ran much of the regional government and the education ministry. The boys’ school at which I taught had just been built and was the second high school in a province of perhaps half a million people. There was no public secondary education for girls. As in much of the continent, progress still moved on all fours. After half a century, Africa was still in a virtually unique darkness so far as literacy and numeracy, and also social development, were concerned. Economic
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development, other than in South Africa where it was sustained by racism and forced labour, was minimal. (One day some inventive student will compare the progress and environmental costs of capitalist colonialism in Africa with that of communist colonialism in Central Asia in the same period. Regarding education and economic development, my guess would be that the communists were far ahead.) Even after the states of Africa had been given their independence, they continued to be dominated by either their former colonial rulers, or by the United States, or by the two in combination – not directly, of course, but through the institutions that they controlled, including the commodities markets, development agencies, the IMF and World Bank, the banks of the City of London, Zurich, and the Cayman Islands, the mining and oil companies, and so on. Prices for cocoa or tin or peanut oil were determined in London and New York and were hardly responsive to African demands. There was no OPEC for pineapples. But, of course, economic dependency was planned: this is what Kwame Nkrumah and the British communist writer, Jack Woddis meant when they spoke of “neocolonialism.” From the point of view of the former colonial states like Britain and France, neocolonialism – by any other name – is what made apparent political independence acceptable. In the former French colonies where the franc – known as the CFA franc – was still used, economic independence was not even a pretense. Agricultural development in the former colonies of France, it was made clear, was to be undertaken “from the perspective of a European community.” When the former colonies went off the rails, their former proprietors intervened to put them right. France thus sent in its paratroopers to former colonies nineteen times between 1962 and 1995 and still, in 2012, has kept troops garrisoned in Chad and Gabon, while Britain’s Royal Marines occupied Sierra Leone in 1999.12 The kind of advocacy of neo-trusteeship that has been suggested for Kosovo and Palestine in the last decades will surely be recommended for Africa in the near future, probably under the heading of “responsibility to protect.” Neocolonialism was of course a vice that did not know its own, proper, name; usually it dressed itself up as some form of humanitarian intervention or developmentalism. Developmentalism, in the language of the Financial Times known as “outside assistance,” was one of the most effective means by which Western governments retained control over African futures. The Vatican of developmentalism was the World Bank; it blessed, consecrated, and beatified; its hymnals were its volumes of reports and statistics.
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developmentalism
From before independence – but not long before – the keel had been laid down for developmentalism to become the master narrative for Africa’s future. From the 1960’s, developmentalism took on a life of its own, being featured in thousands of book titles and conference papers, hundreds of professorial appointments, and tens of dedicated institutions. The term, virtually unknown earlier, quite brusquely elbowed its way into demotic speech in virtually all Western countries; say “development” and most educated people thought that they knew what you were talking about, whether you were referring to northern Canada or southern Sudan. In general, they thought “progress” and “modern.” Development, in Africa at least, was assured by “aid,” that is, charity. Aid, too, had a peculiar meaning when applied to Africa; postmodernists might say that it begs for deconstruction. It refers to subsidies, seldom without strings, given especially to compliant “partners,” often leading politicians and usually urban dwellers (politicians, researchers, NGO employees, senior civil servants) under special programs authored in Western capitals. “In most African states, major financial institutions fell under the control of the chief executive … [P]residents in Francophone West Africa kept the ministry of planning in their portfolios, not because they were committed to the formulation of development plans but rather because these ministries received, and disbursed, foreign aid; by controlling them the president controlled a major source of foreign exchange.”13 In the last fifty years the West has given Africa an estimated trillion dollars in what is usually known as “development aid.”14 One major source of US development aid is actually called USAID (the United States Agency for International Development). Aid is thus charity with a secular and scientific sheen, ostensibly aimed at modernization, but usually with the purpose of assuring political conformity. This modernization bears the weight of self-interest and moralism and is highly politicized. This is noticeably the case of US and Canadian aid, aimed at preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS that eschews the use of contraceptives, not out of consideration of African susceptibilities but out of calculations that connect to conservative electorates in North America. From the point of view of development aid, Africa was never considered as a whole; as we shall see in the next chapter, there was no equivalent to the Alliance for Progress (1961–70), the continent-wide US program applied to Latin America after the Cuban Revolution as a revolutionary firebreak.
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Among public intellectuals, it is usually only leftists and cranks who criticize the good works of developmentalists who enjoy a status similar to the UN’s peacekeepers. While all Western states, that is to say members of the “international community,” devote significant budgets to developmentalism, much of this is dispersed in support of donor corporations and the engrossed cadre of aid professionals. To fail to meet development targets – canonized by the UN as 0.7 per cent of GNP – is to admit to a kind of moral lassitude, a beggar-thy-neighbour meanness. Of course, few countries actually met the 0.7 target even in the boom times of capitalism. In spite of their remarkable record for inachievement, the developmentalists continue to plod on, a little like the communists in East Germany before 1989, confident in the knowledge that, although certain mistakes may have been made in the past, their command over their science, i.e., economics, and their good intentions justified their existence. Still, from the time that René Dumont wrote L’Afrique noire est mal parti in 1962,15 there have always been discordant voices insisting that development is a sham, a cruel hoax, a form of exploitation posing as charity. Or, more sobering, that Western philanthropy compensates for only a fraction of the wealth flowing out of Africa into Western banks in the form of legal and illicit financial flows. Peter Lawrence has applied the term “developmentalist imperialism” to the aims and effects of the practice.16 Now war is the negation or antithesis of development. If the Middle East holds the record for the most invasions in the last two centuries (most of them, as we have seen, from the West) there has been no part of the Third World that has experienced war more continuously and disastrously in all of its forms since 1945 than sub-Saharan Africa – neocolonial wars, civil wars, resource wars, genocides, and rebellions stand out. Some were, like that which has devastated the Congo in the early twenty-first century, as we shall see below, of remarkable virulence. Virtually all African wars since independence have been connected with a crude kind of ethnic warlordism, sometimes sustained by Western mercenaries and always supported by outside arms dealers. Such wars have as their goal access, and especially monopoly access, to raw materials, especially those of high value such as diamonds and oil. In some cases these wars have often been fought on behalf of some imaginary nation like Biafra or some providential force, like “the Lord.” Neither wars that seek to create new nations nor foreign-sponsored warlordism are a particularly African phenomena. Wars to make nations
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are ubiquitous throughout modern history, while warlordism plagued China in the 1920s and ravages Afghanistan in the present. On the other hand, parts of Africa like Ghana, as we shall see, have been spared the horrors visited upon their neighbours. In more ways than one, Ghana is in fact a model African state. inventing ghana
Kwame Nkrumah (1910–1972) of the Gold Coast, later Ghana, independent Africa’s first head of state, embodied a number of the most attractive characteristics of Africa’s new postcolonial leaders. First of all, he was a civilian, and well-educated at that. He was young, articulate, and urbane – Kennedy-ish, in fact. Far from being a Moscowleaning nationalist like Nasser or Sukarno, or an aristocratic Fabian like Nehru, or a black nationalist of any stripe, although influenced by AfroAmerican black nationalists, he was hardly anti-Western. Conscious of the peaceful protests that had brought independence to India in 1947, he audaciously exploited British uncertainty about the future value of one of their most economically and educationally advanced African colonies. He guessed correctly that neither the Labour Party in power (1945–51) nor the postwar British public had the stomach for a colonial war over cocoa, the Gold Coast’s main export. Westerners of all sorts cheered on Nkrumah – progressive churchpersons, liberal idealists, black nationalists, socialists, communists. They saw in the Gold Coast the new, postwar Third World dawn that they had longed for. But Nkrumah didn’t have much of an idea of how to create an independent state where none had existed before – of course, no one did. He knew that the Gold Coast had certain sterling reserves kept in the Bank of England and assumed that these, together with a rising demand for cocoa could be used to pay for the construction of a new state sustained, to some extent, by a degree of industrialization. And to his eternal credit, he created in Ghana a platform for demands for independence in the rest of the continent. Nkrumah’s vehicle for power was the Convention People’s Party (CPP). In elections in 1951 and 1956 the CPP won power, and on 6 March 1957, the Gold Coast, now renamed Ghana, became independent. All things considered, the British seem to have played their cards wisely: in another favourite colony, Kenya, there had been an insurrection in 1952, and in the French colony of Algeria, an outright war since late 1956. But then in both of these colonies there existed a settler
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population that pumped up racist hysteria in the interest of its own survival. This kind of hysteria was absent in Ghana. In fact, a literate, Westernized, Ghanaian elite had massaged a strong sense of its own political rights vis-à-vis the British since the late nineteenth century. The Ghana of Kwame Nkrumah barely lasted a decade, but in that decade mass nationalist parties spread across the continent – to Nigeria, Ghana’s next-door neighbour that became independent in 1960, and to most of French Africa, which was freed later in the decade. Only Portugal’s African territories (Guiné, Angola, Mozambique), Namibia, Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), and South Africa remained under colonial or white-minority rule. As we have stressed, Portugal itself was one of the most retarded of West European states; even the Balkans seemed modern compared to Portugal. Ghana meanwhile surged ahead. With £200 million in sterling reserves to spend and the world price for cocoa on an apparently endless escalator, there was every reason to design ambitious programs of national economic development. Of course, the whole of the world in the 1950s, communist as well as capitalist, was dreaming of a future prosperity somewhere, not so far away, over the rainbow. In Ghana, an extensive harbor and industrial park were built at Tema, along the coast east of Accra, and the massive Akosombo Dam was raised on the Volta River to provide hydroelectric power for the country and its infant industries. Ghana was now, development optimists predicted, moving out of the agricultural and into the industrial stage of development. Still, the future was not without clouds; Ghana’s economy was resolutely peasant-based and the peasants produced very little surplus that could be saved and invested. The modern elements of the economy were few in number, miniscule in size and almost entirely British-owned. In fact, it was the continued hold of Britain over Ghana that led Nkrumah to argue, after he had been deposed, that his country had gone from colony to neocolony without actually becoming independent.17 Other obstacles that stood in the way of Ghanaian development were several and seem not to have been foreseen either by the Ghanaians or their British advisors. One involved markets: who would buy Ghana’s industrial goods? Not her francophone neighbours who remained tied financially, militarily and even, at the upper levels, culturally, to France’s apron strings. Nigeria, to the east, was a huge market but one in which Ghanaian goods would have to compete with those sold by the British, the Indians, and the Lebanese whose domination of the markets for imported goods was of long standing. Then there was the commodity
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roller coaster. Cocoa prices had climbed from £190 to £352 per tonne between 1948 and 1958, and then, in the early 1960s, swooped sickeningly downward. Rising export prices had allowed an increase in imports that had stimulated a “feel good” atmosphere in the run-up to independence. Falling cocoa prices and diminishing sterling reserves had just the opposite effect. As his critics both inside and outside the country moved against him, Nkrumah, fatally convinced of his own messianism, became more isolated and dictatorial. In 1964 he turned Ghana into a one-party state; this only decreased his popularity. While he was in China at a conference in February 1966, Nkrumah was deposed in a military coup. There was dancing in the streets. In London, the day after the coup, the Times wrote unctuously that if the militarists behind the coup “generate confidence, and want help, Ghana would be worth salvaging again.” Its editors didn’t have to say in whose interest it would be “worth salvaging” but its readers knew. On the same day Nkrumah sent a telegram from Beijing to his secretary: “Don’t forget that world imperialism and neo-colonialism hate my guts and all I stand for. They know I am in the way.”18 When he returned to Africa, it was as an exile. He spent the remaining few years of his life living in Conakry in neighbouring Guiné. Sub-Saharan Africa’s pioneer independent state had become one of the continent’s first victim of a military intervention: “coup” now became a word in the lexicon of Africa watchers.19 After the fall of Kwame Nkrumah the generals who overthrew him failed to “generate confidence.” They were, instead, as one African leader indicated, “musical comedy generals” who knew nothing of how to manage an independent economy under the difficult conditions that affected Ghana – especially the dependence on only a few resources and with low levels of agricultural productivity. Yet, the generals marched on, wheeling about in a generally rightish direction, one group succeeding another, each changing the rubric under which it misruled: a “National Liberation Council” gave way to a “Presidential Commission” that was succeeded by a “National Redemption Council” until the last awkward squad was marched off the square and its beribboned officers confined to their barracks. The generals’ nemesis was a young air force officer, Jerry Rawlings (b. 1947), who, having turned them out in a coup, returned power to a civilian regime before deciding that it, too, was incompetent and so seized power himself once more. Over the long duration of his rule, from 1981 to 2001, Rawlings was, like Nkrumah, at first, if somewhat
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briefly, remarkably popular and then unmistakably unpopular. His appeal diminished from 1983 when the “Structural Adjustment Program” insisted on by the World Bank and the IMF led to the dismantling of much of Ghana’s public health and welfare schemes and destroyed any prospect of even modest import substitution industrialization. Yet, overall, whether due to the programs of structural adjustment or not, living standards in Ghana improved, in part because of lashings of aid and borrowed money. As Paul Nugent notes, “[G]overnment revenues covered only 56 per cent of spending in 2000, which meant that the state remained heavily dependent on external aid.”20 According to the same writer, however, “in 1998, Ghanaian life expectancy stood at 50 years, which was above the African average and an improvement on the average of 45 years in 1960. Moreover, over the ten-year period from 1978 to 1988 infant mortality is estimated to have plunged from 77 to 60 per thousand while the percentage of immunized children is estimated to have risen from 31 to 56 per cent over the five years after 1988.”21 Rawlings, meanwhile, remained in power, promoting his relations wherever possible, until he withdrew in favour of John Agyekum Kufuor in January 2001. Kufuor was re-elected in 2004 and succeeded in 2008 by John Atta Mills. Some Western writers have been duly impressed at what one former Canadian diplomat, as reported in the press, called “the maturing democracy in Ghana … the envy of much of the continent.”22 Rather than emphasizing “maturing democracy,” which as we have seen in the case of the Asian Tigers is hardly essential to public well-being, this commentator might better have spoken of the durability of the public health system, which in spite of a stagnating economy has managed to survive at a modest level. In spite of the attempts at industrialization by Kwame Nkrumah, the Ghanaian economy has remained rooted in a combination of subsistence agriculture that employed 85 per cent of the country’s work force, on foreign aid, and on loans. As for the state, at least one writer makes the point that it will have to be strengthened and neoliberal orthodoxies, particularly those advocated by the World Bank, abandoned.23 And as for the elite – the politicians, senior civil servants, and employees of international institutions like the NGOs who took over the reigns of “governance” from the colonial rulers – they continue to occupy the residential quarters built for an earlier generation of European rulers, on the whole safe and secure from the turbulence of Ghana’s expanding urban centres and especially their spreading slums.
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dark heart
In 1885, after negotiating with other Western European powers, Leopold II (r. 1865–1909), king of the Belgians, a people whose little state had existed for only half a century, took charge of one of the largest and richest territories in Africa as a personal domain. Now, although his contemporary, Queen Victoria, might have accepted the title “Empress of India,” she didn’t actually, personally, own the subcontinent, to plunder it as she saw fit. Leopold, on the other hand, actually owned the Congo and, in conscious imitation of the British queen, crowned himself “KingSovereign.” He boasted of his possession of “this magnificent African cake” into which he plunged his sticky fingers. For Leopold, owning such a potentially rich estate was a license to print, or, at least to extort, money. And that he did: rather as if Tony Soprano had been given the keys to the US mint at Fort Knox. The exploitation of the Africans of the Congo in the decades of Leopold’s proprietorship forms one of the most terrible chapters in the history of modern European colonialism. The Belgians, beneficiaries of an outpouring of Western sympathy after they had been invaded by the Germans in World War I, were, by any standards, colonial Huns themselves, flogging, fleecing, mutilating, and murdering the Africans of the Congo over a period of long decades, all to the simple end of enriching themselves by plundering the colony’s ivory, rubber, and later industrial commodities like tin, gold, copper, diamonds, and uranium. What happened in the Congo was indeed mass murder on a vast scale. The Anglo-Polish novelist, Joseph Conrad, has his Heart of Darkness character, Kurtz, shout the order, “Exterminate the brutes!” The brutes in question were Leopold’s African subjects. Even as late as the 1950s, by which time the colonial officials of British and French Africa were resigned to undertaking a peaceable and pensionable withdrawal from the continent, the Belgians were flogging away at their colonial subjects to make them work harder in the interest of profit for Belgian colonial monopolies. The scandals of their king’s rapacity were, in the end, too much for the parliamentarians of Brussels. After paying him a king’s ransom, in 1908 the Belgian state took over the colony and created what has been called “a Leviathan state,” one that controlled the colony at a far deeper level than was common elsewhere in the colonial world. “Domination – pervasive, systematic, comprehensive – characterized all aspects of … the colonial situation.”24 For the Belgians this maximal domination was meant to come at minimal cost: “hegemony” and “revenue” were the
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keywords of Belgian colonialism. “Mass terror” in the Congo was simultaneous with the devastations carried out in the Balkan Wars and prefigured the later barbarisms visited on Poland and Byelorussia by Belgium’s near neighbour, Germany. independence
When the chill winds of change blew across Africa in the 1950s, the Belgians were caught with their shorts down. In the Congo, dozens of parties rose, each with its own leader, its own supporters and its own goals. Of the leaders, two initially stood out, Joseph Kasavubu and Patrice Lumumba. Kasavubu was a Bakongo tribalist educated in a Catholic seminary. The Congo was named after the tribe to which he and most of his followers belonged. They had been divided in the colonial scramble between the French Congo, the Belgian Congo, and Angola. He promised them a united Bakongo nation. Patrice Lumumba was more secular and cosmopolitan, a bit like Kwame Nkrumah but without the educated intelligence. He had in fact visited Ghana in December 1958 and was swayed by Nkrumah’s speech at the All-African Peoples’ Conference. Infatuated with the idea of independence and excited by Nkrumah’s rhetoric, he was determined to lead a united Congo to independence. His vehicle was the mass-based Mouvement National Congolais (MNC), a southern cousin of the Gold Coast’s CPP. A month after he returned, there was rioting in the Congolese capital Léopoldville (later Kinshasa) and the Belgians, now trapped in the headlights of a global anti-colonialism, panicked. They advanced the timetable for local elections. More anti-colonial violence followed. Again the Belgians pushed the deadline for independence forward; it came on 30 June 1960. They consoled themselves that they would remain in control of the economy, especially the mining monopoly. In any event, here was one of the largest and richest countries in Africa where the total number of educated people, including priests, was in the hundreds. In the year of independence there were only 136 children in secondary schools, fewer than in any one of several secondary schools in Ghana and fewer than in a single graduating class of any secondary school in any middling Canadian city. Just before independence, elections were held. The party of Lumumba, the MNC, won the largest number of seats and he was therefore in a position to become the first prime minister. In July an army mutiny swept the country. Lumumba became caricatured by the Belgians, and
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more importantly by the Americans, as a maddened stooge of Moscow. Lè yo vle touye chen yo di’il fou (“When people want to kill a dog, they say it’s rabid” is the appropriate Haitian aphorism.)25 Washington decided that he would have to be removed. In December, by which time chaos had spread even further, he was arrested, and in January 1961, with the agreement of Brussels and Washington and to the satisfaction of his African political rivals, he was tortured and then shot by a firing squad commanded by a Belgian officer. When the news got out there were demonstrations across the Third World. Africa had now its own martyr to stand beside other victims of the Cold War. For the Congo, decades of repression, civil war, invasion, and plunder would follow. The West had created a Haiti in Africa. Its Papa Doc was Joseph-Désiré Mobutu (1930–1997).26 Franz Fanon (1925–1961) had feared as much. Fanon, a West Indian from Martinique trained as a psychiatrist, was a war hero in the fight of the Free French against fascism. Serving with the French army, he witnessed the vengeful cruelty of France in its dealing with its colonial subjects and weighed the costs of colonialism on the self-esteem of the colonized. Abandoning the French to work for Algeria’s liberation movement, the Front de la Libération Nationale (FLN), he saw firsthand the effects of the systematic torture that the French inflicted on their victims. His analyses, anticipating the French admission of their practices by as much as three decades, was most persuasively rendered in his The Wretched of the Earth, the study banned in France but read by students right across the First World in the 1960s.27 While Fanon’s hope for an African revolution was undimmed in his lifetime, he had earnest doubts about many of the African leaders who would take over from the European colonialists. Likening the heads of their various West African one-party states to “chairmen of the board of a society of impatient profiteers,” he commented: “Scandals are numerous, ministers grow rich, their wives doll themselves up, the members of parliament feather their nests and there is not a soul down to the simple policeman or customs officer who does not join the great procession of corruption.”28 Franz Fanon died five years after the independence of Ghana and just a year before the French withdrew from Algeria. Had he lived a little longer he might have witnessed the fuller blossoming of francophone Africa’s mawkish neocolonial elite. As Time magazine reported admiringly about the Houphouet-Boignys, the first family of Côte d’Ivoire, “The Ivory Coast’s First Lady is coiffed by one of the most exclusive Paris hairdressers … and dressed by Dior whose salon is
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strategically located across the street from the Houphouet-Boigny’s apartment … The affluent Houphouet-Boignys also have a villa in the stylish Swiss resort of Gstaad [as] her six-year-old adopted daughter … is attending school in Switzerland.”29 mobutu ’s zaire
But it was in the former Belgian Congo that Fanon’s mere misgivings became nightmares. In the place of the murdered Patrice Lumumba, after an interval of several years, rose Joseph-Désiré Mobutu, a former soldier in the Belgian colonial army who had been on the local CIA payroll. During his thirty-year rule, Mobutu rose to become the most monumentally corrupt African leader of the twentieth century. The darkness and backwardness that his years in office ensured remained in full and unprotesting view of the foreign and mainly Western governments that supported him. Adam Hochschild recalls Mobutu’s reign – and his friends: “US military aid helped Mobutu repel several attempts to overthrow him. Some of his political enemies he ordered tortured and killed; some he co-opted into his ruling circles; others he forced into exile. The United States gave him well over a billion dollars in civilian and military aid during the three decades of his rule; European powers – especially France – contributed more. For its heavy investment, the United States and its allies got a regime that was reliably anti-Communist and a secure staging area for CIA and French military operations, but Mobutu brought his country little except a change of name, in 1971, to Zaire.”30 Since Mobutu’s corruption was beyond parody, we are bound to ask further how he was able to endure – that is, other than with the support of the United States, Belgium, and France. His secrets to success were several. Leaving aside terror, Mobutu was able to mobilize the support of both local and foreign allies by giving them crumbs from the cake of national wealth. He covered up corruption to some extent by appealing to the self-interest of Zaire’s midget elite. In 1973, for instance, he “indigenized” agricultural estates and small businesses, removing them from their foreign owners and handing them over to the “sons of the country.” Thus, ownership by expatriates – Belgians, Greeks, Portuguese, and even Pakistanis – was terminated and a new class of Zairois propertyowners was born. He also took over a golden goose in the form of the Union Minière de Haut Katanga – the great Belgian monopoly that was to become the mainstay of the economy. Assets worth as much as a billion dollars were distributed to those whom he favoured, especially to
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those from his own Ngbandi tribe. Mobutu himself did well out of the process, taking over fourteen estates and thus paving the way for his becoming the fourth largest employer in the country. Of course, many of the beneficiaries of the distribution of spoils were incompetent, transforming their boons into consumer goods, like Mercedes Benzes, or rental properties. From 1974, due to corruption and mismanagement, the economy of Zaire regressed slowly into the pre-capitalist era. Yet, while it regressed, its civil service payroll grew as those who were loyal to the regime were rewarded for their fidelity. Besides local allies, Mobutu had built up a network of foreign friends, most of whom licked their lips over the prospects of Zaire’s mineral and petroleum wealth and what remained of its domestic markets. Thus, mining speculators, oil explorers, and manufacturers all crowded into the president’s palace anxious to make deals. General Motors, British Leyland, and French Renault all assembled cars while Goodyear made tires. Krupp manufactured palm oil and soap, and, in 1975, Gulf began to produce oil from offshore deposits. The mineral producers and the oil wells, of course, were largely in foreign hands and thus produced limited wealth for the state and its rulers. The assemblers and manufactures were no less limited in their value as the goods they produced were more expensive than imports. The 1974 nationalizations may be seen as the beginning of the end of Zaire as a viable national economy. Of the approximate $800 million the nationalized copper mines produced annually, officials stole as much as $270 million. The situation worsened in the 1980s and ’90s as corruption deepened, copper profits dipped, export costs increased, and the countryside could no longer feed the swelling urban population. Even by 1980, 36 per cent of the population was urban and by the end of the century this had risen to nearly a half. Despite talks about rehabilitating the agrarian economy, virtually nothing was done as roads from the countryside became more impassable and transport vehicles collapsed. Nor was there any attempt at agrarian rehabilitation through the normal means of rural credit or investment in improved practices and seeds. As certain sectors of the agricultural economy went into decline – such as cotton and palm oil exports that had thrived under the colonial state – imports took their place. By 1980, then, there was simultaneously economic stagnation and population growth. And to shift the country down a gear from bad to worse, there was structural adjustment, first laid on the country by the IMF in 1977 and then brought down again a decade later. More retrenchment, further sales of public assets, removal
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of exchange controls, and a massive loss of jobs as the civil service was slashed and industries closed down. By the early 1990s the national economy was in complete ruins. In May 1997 Laurent-Désiré Kabila, a rebel general, ousted Mobutu, who died a few months later in exile. The dictator was spoiled for retirement choice since he had homes in Paris, Switzerland, and Portugal, farms in Cape Town, Madrid, Marbella, and Marrakech, and a villa on the Riviera. Fittingly, the villa had formerly belonged to King Leopold. Kabila renamed the country “the Democratic Republic of Congo” and ruled it autocratically until January 2001 when he was assassinated by one of his bodyguards. His son Joseph took over from him. Meanwhile, regional leaders, some of whom having been associated with the genocide in Rwanda in 1994, seized power in key regions, and ethnic tensions, leading to mass killings, multiplied. In 2006 Joseph Kabila won the country’s first democratic elections, while in the east of the country a breakaway party formed under General Laurent Nkunda. Kabila refused to talk to Nkunda, calling him a “terrorist.” In January 2008 another civil war, one with its origins in 1998, a year after the overthrow of Mobutu, broke out that led to the deaths of as many as 5.4 million people, making it, according to the International Rescue Committee the deadliest conflict since World War II.31 Foreign Policy magazine referred to Kabila as “Congo’s New Mobutu,” stressing the ruthlessness of his reign of terror (“one of the world’s worst human rights records”), the wretchedness of the lives of the Congo’s citizens, and the unflagging support he continues to claim and receive from the leaders of the West.32 No longer invisible, behind the scenes lurked those who were interested in the Congo’s rich minerals, like Western multinationals, always with their eyes wide open for advantage at any price. It is a simple matter to point the finger at the Belgians, and at Mobutu in particular, and to lay the tragedies that have befallen the Congo at their feet. In fact, as we shall see in the following section, the problems of Africa in the postcolonial epoch have affected even the most stable and developed of African states. What is more, the problem of tyranny has never been particular to the Congo. Mobutu’s rivals in the rogue’s gallery of political criminals, Idi Amin (r. 1971–79) of Uganda, JeanBedel Bokassa (r. 1965–79) of the Central African Republic, and Francisco Macias (r. 1968–79) of Equatorial Guinea have been perhaps more malevolent than Daniel arap Moi of Kenya (r. 1978–2002) or Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe (1980-present), but hardly less avaricious. All have had delusions of grandeur and some have been clinically
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unbalanced. Just as the Belgians underwrote Mobutu,33 the French supported the Bokassa regime and the whole of the West, following the lead of the World Bank and the IMF, sustained arap Moi, long after they began to be embarrassed by their excesses. What remains in many places from Somalia to the Congo thus is a fetid and emaciated ruin. Of Kinshasa, the slum that was once Léopoldville, it has been lamented: [it] has been wrecked by a perfect storm of kleptocracy, Cold War geopolitics, structural adjustment, and chronic civil war. The Mobutu dictatorship, which for 32 years systematically plundered the Congo, was the Frankenstein monster created and sustained by Washington, the IMF, and the World Bank, with the Quai d’Orsay in a supporting role. The World Bank – nudged when needed by the State Department – encouraged Mobutu to use the collateral of his nation’s mineral industries to borrow vast sums from foreign banks, knowing full well that most of the loans were going straight to private Swiss bank accounts.34 On the UN’s Human Development Index (2007) – an exercise of invidious comparisons if ever there was one – Ghana stands as a middling sort of country, 152nd in a pecking order that has South Africa as 129th, the Congo, unbelievably, at 136 and Nigeria at 158. In relative terms Ghana’s exalted status is impressive, although, while it is not as poor as the most miserable states in Africa, it hardly compares to most of Southeast or South Asia or even all but the poorest states of Latin America. In any case, it is ultimately meaningless to compare Africa with Asia or even Ghana with the Congo, a country, perhaps unfortunately, overflowing with resources but chronically despoiled and destitute, or with South Africa, a country in a category of its own. south africa
South Africa remains the richest, most developed country in Africa and the last to be ruled by non-Africans. Between 1652 when the first Dutch settlers arrived and 1994 when the last white ruler stepped down, South Africa became Africa’s preeminent colony of white settlement on which, until they were abandoned by their foreign rulers, Kenya and Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) were modelled. But unlike these, or Algeria, which became the home for French settlers for a century, the roots of European
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and Asian settlement in South Africa extend over three centuries with the Europeans ruling invariably over the rest and establishing a strict, if leaky, hierarchy of races for most of the time. Remarkably for Africa, between the time of the Anglo-Boer War (1899–1901) and World War II, under the banner of Volkskapital (the people’s economy), the white settlers, through their domination of the state, took control of key sectors of the economy of the country, from its insurance companies, through its armament manufactures, to its mines. South Africa in fact exemplifies a kind of Third Reich model of tropical economic development, seen nowhere else in the twentieth century. Its central political doctrine was one of white supremacy known as apartheid (“apartness”). This was a kind of pseudo-philosophy, rooted in nineteenth-century British colonial mining ordinances and sustained by the teachings of the local Calvinist Church. Its central object was to prop up and enforce extreme inequality on the basis of spurious criteria of race, as we shall see below. It took the idea of “Indian” reservations, as we know them in Canada, and applied it to a country where two-thirds of the population were Africans. Following the logic of this idea there were created some ten widely dispersed reserves called “Bantustans” or “Homelands,” one for each designated “tribe.” These Homelands the Africans were meant to call their own; beyond them in the cities and on the white-owned farmlands and mines, Africans had no rights and had to carry passes if they wanted to avoid prison and the ordeals of forced labour. The crowning of the South African apartheid system was constitutionally secured in 1948, the year after much of South Asia had become independent, when a new white-racist Nationalist Party was installed in power. The Nationalists, predominately boers, that is, speakers of a Dutch-related dialect called “Afrikaans,” ruled over a population of 12.5 million of which the boers and the English-speakers, formed 21 per cent, Coloured and Asians another 11 per cent, and Africans 68 per cent.35 From 1948 to 1972, and especially from 1964 to 1972, the South African economy boomed with the country experiencing one of the highest growth rates in the capitalist world – an average annual growth of 6 to 8 per cent. Foreign investment flooding into the country permitted South African defence expenditures to increase from $63 million to $1 billion between 1960 and 1975, “defence” in this context referring to the role of the state in both sustaining apartheid and destabilizing neighbouring Angola and Mozambique, which, after the
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Portuguese colonial regime collapsed in 1975, came to be ruled regimes that were anti-colonial and even, ostensibly, socialist. To those, white settlers and foreign investors alike, despairing of the crisis afflicting the rest of the continent, South Africa was a haven where investments could be assured of peaceful increase. This was so at least until the 1980s when the implacable tide of African protest, a debt crisis, and international pressure, especially from the United States, caused the more enlightened members of the white ruling class to re-examine the premises of white rule and call for democratic elections. In February 1990 Nelson Mandela, the leader of the African National Congress (ANC), a common front of Africans and whites, was freed from the prison in which he had been held for twenty-seven years. The ANC itself, previously outlawed, was unbanned. For many, this was a gobsmacking turn of events. In South Africa’s first democratic elections, held on 27–29 April 1994, the ANC acceded to power with 62 per cent of the vote. The supporters of the Nationalist Party, mainly whites together with some sectors of the Coloured population, won 20 per cent. The Nationalist Party soon disappeared altogether. The new head of state was Nelson Mandela, by now aged seventy-six. A negotiated transition, with remarkably little strife, took place bringing to an end nearly three and a half centuries of white advance and black defeat. Nowhere in Africa were Africans now ruled by non-Africans; racial politics now seemed to be dead. Even before the end, the writing was on the wall. In an article in January 1989, Professor J.L. Boshoff, himself an Afrikaaner, had confessed, “What an appalling human tragedy apartheid has been. The Afrikaners’ Frankenstein; their own creation has degenerated into a monster which now threatens to destroy them … How reasonable and intelligent people could have voted for this laughable conception and endorsed it with ever increasing majorities, is one of the great mysteries of democracy. I am guilty myself. I voted for it.”36 Others had anticipated the end even before Boshoff; for from 1984 secret negotiations had been taking place between proxies of the Nationalists and the ANC. Mandela himself, like the leaders of the Indian National Congress in the prelude to Indian independence, had been in talks while still in prison. Not before time, the leaders of some of the grandest of the capitalist firms in South Africa had realized that the apartheid state had reached the end of its tether. Profits would have to be assured according to other arrangements.
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Several questions may be asked, one of which is why did the whites under their leader, President de Klerk (r. 1989–94), surrender political power. R.W. Johnson explains: [de Klerk defied] all predictions that Afrikaners would draw their wagons in a circle and fight to the last. Had de Klerk been willing to pay this price, the apartheid state could have fought on for another decade. But de Klerk and the modernizing Afrikaners he represented wanted to be part of the cosmopolitan Western middle class … The reason why [he] could give away one bargaining counter after another was that the real bet he was making was that if he made the best of what was by now a thoroughly bad job, at least his volk [people] would be able to carry on living in South Africa in relative peace – the fundamental deal – and the logic of the capitalist economic system in place would carry the black elite along with it. “It’s not just the ports and the roads and the airports,” he told me … “Look at our big companies. We’re not a satellite economy. Look at our banks, our financial infrastructure. We have built well.” … Ten years on from liberation, with a burgeoning new black capitalist elite very much to the fore, one can see that … de Klerk probably won his long-term bet.37 The 1994 election was a moment of great euphoria, not only in South Africa but right across Africa. As a beginning, the new ANC government introduced an ambitious Reconstruction and Development Program aimed at redressing social inequalities; all South Africans were now to enjoy the fruits of emancipation. The program abolished all of the ten homelands and extinguished the legal residues of apartheid. And above all of this stood Nelson Mandela. If the “miracle” of South Africa’s transformation was contrived, Mandela’s saintly status was genuine. “Mandela spoke from the heart about the need for reconciliation and for everyone to pull together for the sake of the country. Coming from a man who had spent over a third of his life in jail and who had refused all compromise in order to be free, this was magical stuff. Moreover, the man had grace, a sense of humour and a complete lack of grandeur … The country and the world embraced him for all that.”38 In 1999 Thabo Mbeki (b. 1942) replaced Mandela. Mbeki, who had become the effective head of the ANC after independence, had spent his whole life in the party. Indeed, he was a consummate apparatchik, doctrinaire, manipulative, vindictive, secretive. Brushing aside Mandela’s
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pleas for reconciliation between all of the races, Mbeki brought back racial politics by stressing the existence of two separate nations, black and white. And, he claimed, it was the turn of the black nation, or at least the black members of the ruling party and the small black middle class, to prosper. But while there was prosperity for the few, for the mass of Africans, especially the poor in the rural areas, times were as bad as ever they had been under apartheid. By early 2003, on one measure, unemployment stood at 42.1 per cent and was rising. Among African women it was over 50 per cent. This was a partial explanation of the rise of prostitution and the spread of HIV/AIDS that we shall mention below. In spite of all the brave talk about transferring wealth from whites to blacks, then, what was really happening was a transference of some wealth from a mainly white to mixed black and white minority. One of the world’s most unequal societies, usually mentioned in the same breath as Brazil, another multiracial society, became, as a consequence, even more unequal. As for the whites, on the whole, they either migrated, mainly to English-speaking countries like Canada, or stayed at home, still in possession of most of their wealth. The flight of capital was nonetheless marked. Many of South Africa’s great corporations, in which de Klerk had been so confident, showed little faith in the new social experiment and moved their headquarters out to the country. Nor was the confidence of foreign capital much different. Thus, both domestic and foreign direct investment fell off precipitously. The most egregious disgrace of the Mbeki regime has not been its failure to improve the living standards of black South Africans; it has been its refusal to deal with the catastrophe of the HIV/AIDS epidemic that has devastated the country. “Every senior UN official, engaged directly or indirectly in the struggle against AIDS, to whom I have spoken about South Africa, is completely bewildered by the policies of President Mbeki,” Stephen Lewis, the UN Special Envoy to Africa for HIV/AIDS, has written.39 The HIV/AIDS epidemic has, in fact, had a short if lethal history. The first significant group of sufferers was reported among Malawian workers in South Africa’s mines. Thereafter, the sexually transmitted disease spread rapidly. Mandela’s government promised to give the AIDS campaign high priority but, in fact, did little about it. Mbeki and his colleagues at first even denied its existence. One of his ministers actually claimed to a parliamentary caucus that it was a plot by the CIA in alliance with the drug companies.
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By mid 2003 the AIDS pandemic had secured its millionth victim and the death rate of 1,000 was rising fast. Another 5.3 millions South Africans were HIV positive and by 2010 there would be 2.5 million AIDS orphans. Despite this the government was still trying by every means to delay and postpone the delivery of antiAIDS drugs. The sheer callousness of the new ANC elite towards the black unemployed and those suffering from AIDS is difficult to describe, surpassing the cruelties of … the old [Nationalist] elite. Take the simple statistic that in 2002 91,000 babies (almost all of them black) were born HIV positive and that at the very least 50 per cent of all of these babies could have been saved had antiretroviral drugs been made available, as they were, for example, in neighboring Botswana. Even on these minimalist terms, the Mbeki government was allowing 45,000 black babies to die unnecessarily every year – far more than were lost in the whole period of apartheid.40 As AIDS deaths and unemployment both increased and wealth flowed from the many to the few, skilled whites emigrated with their intellectual capital. One government report was forced to concede that at some point in the near future “we could soon reach a point where the negatives start to overwhelm the positives. This could precipitate a vicious cycle of decline in all spheres.” “Something has gone wrong with the post-Mandela government,” commented Lewis.41 In September 2008 Thabo Mbeki was defeated as head of South Africa’s ruling party. His successor was Jacob Zuma. envoi
For better or worse, through thick and thin, writing on Africa remains, in simplistic terms, bipolar, divided on the dark side between the pessimists, like Leys, Milanovic, and Lawrence, whom we shall see below. On the sunny side are the Western and African liberal optimists, or, at least hopefuls, like Lewis, whom I have quoted above. The former tend to hold the West to account – especially its leaders in the United States and France – and its institutions like the World Bank and the IMF. The latter tend to live in hope and to show confidence either in African leadership or in Western generosity. A visible minority of these, sometimes connected to the world of rock ‘n’ roll, see African regeneration as a celebrity cause. While the pessimists are on the ascent in the more
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academic media, the optimists continue to command the attention of the mass media, which often represents Africa on the cusp of some sort of renaissance. Since I am obviously on the dark side, let me consider a couple of the pessimists’ interventions. In 1994, writing on the “the collapse of development” in the New Left Review, Colin Leys explained: “We now know that [predictions of steady African economic growth were] a tragic delusion, and that after the ‘development decades’ most people in sub-Saharan Africa are poorer than they were thirty years ago, while a chronic dependency on ‘aid’ has made a mockery of their countries’ formal sovereignty.”42 A decade later Branko Milanovic of the World Bank, presumably speaking out of turn, added his voice: “We should not … be surprised if marginalization of many countries, and of the whole African continent, deepens. Like some social or ethnic groups in affluent countries, they would be excluded from progress. At some regular intervals, debt would be forgiven … we know that debt forgiveness is simply a palliative solution, and – unless the structural conditions are changed – one debt forgiveness only follows another. In the long term it solves little” (my italics).43 Milanovic has divided the world into four parts: twenty-nine of the sixty-one countries in the Fourth World are in Africa. Only four African countries are in the next highest category which he calls the Third World: Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, and South Africa. None are in the highest category. Five years after Milanovic and fourteen years after Leys, Peter Lawrence explains: “The trajectory of much of sub-Saharan Africa over the past thirty years has been a standing rebuke to advocates of the free-market Washington Consensus. Successive waves of structural adjustment programmes, international conflict mediation, good-governance monitoring and the best effort of numerous westernfunded NGOs appear to have done nothing to halt rural crisis, ethnic conflicts and spreading shanty towns. In the eyes of many critics, they have merely exacerbated the situation.”44 In 2001, as Africa spiraled downwards, certain African leaders came up with a scheme for billions more in development aid from the West, to be known as the “New Partnership for Africa’s Development” (NEPAD). Behind it were Nigeria’s president (1999–2007) and one-time military dictator, Olusegun Obasanjo, and South Africa’s president Thabo Mbeki. Of Obasanjo, the Financial Times commented, “In Nigeria, a cabal of tycoons benefited from an unabashed blend of raw capitalism
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and economic nationalism under former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who believed the emergence of national business titans … was an important step if Nigeria was to emerge as a global economic power.”45 Unsurprisingly, NEPAD has come to little. New initiatives, sustained by billions of development dollars from the “international community” (especially the supporters of the IMF, the World Bank, and subsidiary institutions) are doubtless in the process of being launched. Globalization and neoliberalism remain, despite being roundly condemned by their critics, barely more tarnished in the eyes of Western developmentalists than they were thirty years ago when they were launched. game changers i
“We see Africa as probably the greatest open field of manoeuvre in the worldwide competition between the [communist] bloc and the noncommunist,” affirmed President John F. Kennedy in 1962.46 It was the Soviets, of course, that the American president had in mind, and they were everywhere – in Egypt, Algeria, Guinea, Angola, Tanzania, Somalia, and even South Africa. The Chinese, communists of a different gravity internationally, were an insubstantial presence: Zhou En-lai visited Africa between December 1963 and February 1964 but Beijing was hardly either a commercial or military threat to the continuing domination by the West. Although the Chinese premier proclaimed that Africa was ripe for revolution, the African policy of Beijing was distressingly uninformed and opportunistic. Upon the withdrawal of the Portuguese from Angola in 1975, for instance, Beijing backed Holden Roberto, the right-wing and tribalist military adventurer. This absurd and discreditable move was entirely in reaction to Moscow’s support for the left-wing government of the Movimento Populare Libertação de Angola (MPLA), which ruled the capital, Luanda, and part of its hinterland. The MPLA guerrillas had been successful at doing what guerrillas are supposed to do – making foreign intervention unbearably costly. Together with the guerrillas in Guiné and Angola they had driven the Portuguese out of Africa, and established, briefly as it turned out, three Marxist states. Roberto, aided by the People’s Republic, was also backed by his in-law Mobutu and the CIA. The Chinese from the 1950s through the 1980s, were obviously bewildered by African politics. Counterproductively, their presence stimulated the Soviets to redouble their efforts in favour of the Marxist MPLA whose leaders managed to hang on to power and oil until the peace agreement
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of 1992. Bewilderment was made worse by the fact that the MPLA government, faced by an invasion force from South Africa, was rescued by the Cubans. The boers, who had illusions of supremacy over the whole of southern Africa, were backed by Washington and London. Nowhere in this political maelstrom do we see concern for the security of Africans being weighed into the equation, much less advanced. Nor, when peace came, did the situation improve: “[W]hile the MPLA speaks of the ‘needs of the people,’ it in fact channels little of Angola’s oil wealth to them. The president has retreated to his palace; the party elite to their villas, and their Mercedes and Land Cruisers course through streets of Luanda, which is [sic] strewn with garbage and broken glass and inhabited by maimed soldiers.”47 Until the Chinese signed an oil deal with the Sudan in 1995, Beijing’s presence was little more consistent and hardly more principled. Finally, after a further decade of watching and waiting, not least for American moves in the Gulf, came the moment of conspicuous change. In April 2006 the Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Morocco, Nigeria, and Kenya. In June the prime minister, Wen Jiabao, flew to Egypt, Ghana, Congo, Angola, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda. Next, the culmination of the new forward policy, the China-Africa Forum, was held in Beijing in November 2006. All forty-eight of Africa’s leaders were there. Within only two months, in January 2007, the minister of foreign affairs, Li Zhaoxing, was on the road, selling China in Benin, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Chad, Central African Republic, Eritrea, and Mozambique. A year later, in January 2008, his successor, Yang Jiechi, went to South Africa, the Congo, Burundi, and Ethiopia. A total of thirty-one countries visited in less than two and a half years. Dilip Hiro makes it clear that the motives of Beijing are hardly a mystery, even if Chinese diplomacy is at variance from that of the West. An underdeveloped continent three times the size of China, Africa was rich in natural resources. The continent contained one-third of the globe’s uranium, half its gold, two-thirds of its manganese, nine-tenths of its platinum and cobalt, and almost all of its chromium. The PRC [People’s Republic of China] was eager to gain access to these minerals to feed its fast-growing industry … For hydrocarbons, the PRC focused on Angola, Gabon, Nigeria, Somalia, and Sudan. Its copper supplies came from Zambia, iron ore from South Africa, platinum from Zimbabwe, and tropical timber from Congo Brazzaville. Little wonder that China’s trade with
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Africa had almost quadrupled to $48 billion in the six years before the 2006 China-Africa Forum, and that five hundred Chinese companies were active in Africa.48 In return for the raw materials sold by their leaders, ordinary Africans got a mixed basket of cheap manufactured goods like plastics and enamelware together with an increasing amount of technical assistance. In 2006 Hu Jintao had announced that development aid to Africa was to be doubled and Beijing moved forward to finance and build railways, hydroelectric dams, schools, ports, and roads. This aid, which exceeded that of the World Bank, came without political or moral conditions – the Chinese did not insist that African leaders accept either the tenets of neoliberalism or the principles of human rights. Hu Jintao had spoken, tellingly in oil-rich Gabon, about aid “without strings attached.”49 Now, by the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, trade between Africa and China had taken off. Amounting to nearly $10 billion in 2001 and $50 billion in 2006, it was expected to reach $100 billion by 2010. As Dambisi Moyo emphasizes by the middle of the twenty-first century’s first decade, Angola had surpassed Saudi Arabia as China’s biggest single supplier of oil while African countries as a whole provided around 30 per cent of China’s crude oil imports.50 In the promotional literature to attract British settlers, Kenya around 1950 had been formatted as a “White Man’s Country.” Sixty years later (in 2010) the fantasy of white settlement and rule in Africa had long since been forgotten. But another emigration had eventuated. There were now as many as 100,000 Chinese in Nigeria, 30,000 in Angola, 40,000 in Zambia, and 200,000 to 300,000 in South Africa, and tens of thousands more scattered in the capitals and markets of the continent.51 In some places, indeed, Chinese merchants set up stalls in marketplaces, just as, at the beginning of the twentieth century, Lebanese, Greek, and Indian merchants seeking profit in the interstices of European colonialism, had done the same. The difference was while the Lebanese sold textiles and simple metal goods from Europe, the Chinese were selling goods made in China. So too are African merchants, many of whom go to China to buy goods to export to Nigeria or Burkina Faso. It has been estimated that there are between 30,000 and 100,000 Africans living in Guangzhou, the huge city on the Pearl River inland from Hong Kong. But the story of the relationship between Africa and China is in its early stages. While it may be that Chinese merchants and investors have thus far been seen to be less intrusive and more sensitive than those
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from the West, there is reason to think that this has begun to change. In November 2010 coal miners in Zambia, a country in which the Chinese have invested as much as $1.2 billion over a decade, protested against the callousness of Chinese managers who speak neither Tonga nor English. According to the New York Times, the managers fired on the workers, wounding thirteen of them.52
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10 The Chimera of Progress in Latin America By the last decade of the twentieth century Latin America had reached the end of an era. The countries with the most advanced economies had undergone an industrial revolution and many of the others had tended to follow in their train. This revolution was impelled by a desire for independence: the international economy, it was argued, was based on a form of “neo-colonialism” because raw materials and foodstuffs were traded for high-value industrial imports, an exchange that was thought to entail subordination to the interests of the developed world. Edwin Williamson, The Penguin History of Latin America
introduction
Africa and Asia had been tinctured with colonialism from the mideighteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries, and direct foreign rule had lasted until after World War II. By contrast, the Age of Empire in Latin America had ended, for the most part, by the 1820s.1 Thereafter, for the rest of the century, the republics of South and Central America enjoyed a slow swelling of demographic,2 political, and economic growth, sometimes with surprising spurts, but still marked by a social system that reflected the values of pre-industrial times and an economy that was essentially still mercantilist. Indeed, into the twentieth century all Latin American economies remained resolutely based on food and beverage processing and textile production. We might think of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as the Golden Age of cocoa, copper, and corned beef. Industry was still waiting for leadership from a class of national capitalists. In 1800, according to Victor Bulmer-Thomas, Latin America had been the richest part of the Third World.3 A century later, following a surge in the growth of world trade that had begun in the middle of the nineteenth century, many of the states of Latin America, especially those
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that had substantial populations, such as Mexico, Argentina, and Brazil, still enjoyed glittering prospects. Argentina had the highest GDP growth rate in Latin America; in 1913, its per capita income was higher than both France and Germany. Its agricultural labour force had shrunk to 34.2 per cent of the total; that of Canada, by comparison, was 37.1. And like Canada, a limitless agrarian frontier could only make farming more successful. But Canada had nothing to compare to the capital of Argentina: “Buenos Aires was comparable only with New York in vitality and modernity in the New World, a thriving cosmopolitan centre unique in Latin America.”4 By 1919 it had a population of two million. In 1921 Montreal, Canada’s largest city, had a population of 619,000. Brazil, the largest state in Latin America, was more populous and prosperous than Portugal by 1800. Like Argentina, that both Uruguay and Chile looked good to prospective European emigrants was in part due to their homogeneous and largely European populations, their swelling urban centres and their substantial agricultural and mineral exports. Brazil’s population was, by contrast, remarkably mixed because of its former slave population, yet, like Argentina in the 1880s, it attracted 200,000 emigrants a year.5 Between 1939 and 1945 Chile’s rate of GDP growth was an impressive 4 per cent and Mexico’s a sizzling 6.2 per cent. In Latin America, Chile had an exemplary tradition of democratic elections, while Mexico avoided the fate of dictatorship altogether after 1910. Europe in the first decades of the twentieth century was lashed by hurricanes of political turbulence and economic uncertainty: rising nations, collapsing empires, teetering states, seething enmities, civil wars, fugitive populations, financial crisis. No wonder Europeans as well as Levantines (especially Syrians) fled in their millions to the New World. In spite of Latin America’s independence, however, both the smaller states and the larger ones continued to be the victims of foreign, and especially US, intervention. Here we might again usefully apply the word “neocolonial,” as Williamson does (in quotation marks) in the opening paragraph of this chapter. What the term refers to in Latin America was control, by Washington and Wall Street, of local oligarchies willing to accept the American Way, but not actual colonial government. Given the impulsion to independence, some arm-twisting if not actual dismemberment was always necessary. Amputation had been the fate of Mexico, which lost its northern provinces to the United States in the mid-nineteenth century. It was the fate, too, of Columbia in 1903; for it was from Columbia that Panama was torn by force so that the Americans could build and control a canal there. Panama thus
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became an American invention, the Washington equivalent to the British-controlled Canal Zone in Egypt, over the control of which, as we have seen, the British and their French and Israeli allies were willing to go to war in 1956. In the decades that followed the Spanish-American War (1897–98) Washington held on to Puerto Rico outright and continued to exercise neocolonial control over Cuba. Elsewhere in the Caribbean Basin it came and went at it pleased. How many times did the United States send its gunboats and Marines to Latin America, often to topple reforming governments? In the enumeration of Greg Grandin, over six thousand times and perhaps a dozen times since 1945.6 Any comparison between the Old World and the New, or, at least, the New World south of the Rio Grande, has to take into account the matter of social status, that is, the connection between class and race. In Brazil race mattered most, and whiteness was especially treasured. Yet, in Spanish America as a whole, only 18.2 per cent of the population was defined as being white in 1825, while 28.3 per cent were seen as mulatto, or mixed-blood. The Indian population was still as high as 41.7 per cent. The point here is that Latin America on the cusp of independence was hardly pure laine European in its pigmentation. This influenced the attitudes towards race that Latin American intellectuals adopted, fitfully, from Europe. And ideas of race were not all that was imported by Latin America’s ruling groups: dreams of Progress and fears of what we now call “underdevelopment” too preoccupied them. “Throughout Latin America the landowners, merchants, entrepreneurs and intellectuals who constituted the local ruling classes and elites dreamed only of achieving that progress which would give their countries, which they knew to be backward, feeble, unrespected and on the margins of western civilization of which they saw themselves as an integral part, the chance to fulfil their historic destiny.”7 As we have seen elsewhere in the Third World, virtually all improvements on the road towards Progress were thus tied to economic development. Development meant change and this was problematic for the oligarchs such as the rural landowners and, of course, their allies in the Catholic Church, as well as the established middle class. But it was just the opposite for the urban workers and immigrants. For much of the first half of the twentieth century, even in spite of nascent industrialization, the middle class, in between the oligarchs and workers, remained relatively small, the working class even smaller, and the peasantry, including especially landless peasants, massive and apparently immovably large. In
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Argentina, for instance, where the middle class was the largest, it comprised only 30 per cent of the total population, and in Mexico, while the middle class of clerks and small proprietors numbered about a million, and the working class about a third of this number, there were eight million tenants, sharecroppers, and agricultural labourers. As for the bourgeoisie, in no country was its membership even 1 per cent of the total. Yet, the wealth of its bourgeoisie sometimes remained spectacular – which we are reminded of by the fact that the richest man in the world, Carlos Slim Helú, who made his fortune through the privatization of Mexico’s telecommunications, is a Mexican of Syrian origin. Another similarity between Latin America and Western Europe was the difference between states, that is, national differences, and this too was connected to national economic development. Between the richer and the poorer Latin American countries there has normally existed a chasm almost as great as between, say, the middle class and the landless agricultural majority. So while some states like Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay were in economic and cultural terms equal to the middling states of Europe, others were shockingly backward in economic terms – more Albanian or African than European. Ecuador, for instance, had never had a census; Bolivia in the early 1960s not had one since 1900, and even Uruguay had not had one since 1910. The gap between advanced and backward states has taken a long time to close. To leap ahead to the present century, according to the UNDP Human Development Report 2007/2008, while the per capita GDP of Mexicans was $10,751, that of Guatemalans was less than half of that ($4,568) and Nicaraguans even less again ($3,674). Nowhere in Europe, especially since 1945, has the chasm between states remained so great.8 To continue to discuss the second half of the twentieth century, a further difference relates to the matter of Latin America’s share of world exports. While Europe’s global exports increased from the end of World War II, those from Latin America, even given the strong growth of the world economy in the 1960s, actually dropped in the three decades between 1946 and 1975. In 1946 Latin America produced 13.5 per cent of the world’s exports. By 1975 this percentage had fallen to 4.4 per cent.9 What we are left with, then, is a sense of continuing inequalities between social classes, between the states of Latin America and between the rich states of Latin America, like Argentina and Chile, and those of the advanced capitalist world, for instance the G7, like Canada and Italy. Such inequalities are hardly decreasing for, except for a narrow
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strata of the very rich and a part of the middle class, Latin Americans have become, compared to Euro Americans, relatively poorer. In 1970 there were 116 million people classified as poor in Latin America, that is, 40 per cent of the total; in 1999 this number had risen to 211 million, 44 per cent of the total. More than half the population of urban Mexico and nearly a third of the rural population lived below the poverty line in 2001.10 The increase in poverty is bound to be connected to other changes. By the first decades of the twentieth century two shifts had in particular matured. First of all, throughout the late nineteenth century, agriculture had become increasingly commercialized while ownership had become more concentrated. Fewer owners thus possessed larger holdings, a class of middling farmers had emerged, and the landless were reduced to either selling their labour in the agricultural sector or migrating to the cities. This urban migration was relentless; in 1919 Buenos Aires, the largest city in Latin America, had two million inhabitants. By 1950 it had 4.6 million, and by 2004, 12.6 million. Mexico City had 2.9 million in 1950 and 22.1 million in 2004. Millions of these lived in slums. Of Brazil’s urban population, 36.6 per cent, that is, 51.7 million people, lived in slums; the figures for Argentina are 33.1 per cent and 11.1 million.11 Among other changes, urbanization sounded the knell for the control the Catholic Church had over the rural population. The second change was that in parts of Latin America the plantations on which such commodities as sugar, bananas, and coffee were grown had come to be owned by foreign firms, such as United Fruit in Central America, one of the earliest American multinational food companies. So powerful were these companies that they overshadowed and dominated the host governments of smaller countries like Guatemala or El Salvador. These became “banana republics,” countries dependent on one or two export crops that were held in bondage by foreign owners who collaborated with oligarchies, an extreme example being the fourteen families (“los catorce”) that ruled El Salvador. The members of the landowning gentry in most Latin American countries like Argentina were typically, if not inevitably, conservative, in that they feared social and gender equality and democracy and looked upon industry, and the nascent working classes, as a threat to the status quo. They naturally detested the reforms implemented by Juan Perón in Argentina and Getúlio Vargas, “the father of the poor,” in Brazil after World War II. Among their allies was the clergy in the upper reaches of the local Church and the army. Behind the Church was the Vatican,
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politically as well as architecturally still living in the Baroque Age of Absolutism and the Counter-Reformation. Even when the popular priests of El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua were being murdered by thugs supported by landowners in the 1980s, the Church in Rome remained diplomatically mute. Rome’s backing of the status quo wavered for a decade from 1968 to ’78 during the period of “liberation theology” but then returned with the certainty of a habit of centuries to its antagonism of any threat of change. the meanings of development
From the end of World War II up to the present Latin America has been a cauldron of relentless and violent struggles. Whereas Western Europe, including Spain, Portugal, and even Greece, as they prospered over the decades after the 1970s, became increasingly democratic and stable, Latin America has been visited by a continuous turbulence at several levels that reminds us of persistent social inequality, uncertain economic development, exaggerated demographic change, unremitting foreign, and especially US interference, and even, considering the drug wars in both Columbia and Mexico, civil war.12 Prior to the Depression in the 1930s Latin American economic development had been based on the economic theory of comparative advantage that celebrated free trade based on the export of minerals, sugar, stimulants, beef, and cereals. Free traders despised protectionism. By contrast, the Canadians had established high tariffs as early as 1879 and behind protective walls had built the steel industry that sustained the national railway system and turned Canada into one of the world’s leading farm equipment manufacturers. The British called the system by which they had dominated the economies of Argentina and Uruguay up to World War II “free trade imperialism.” The British were the main global importers of meat, comprising, in 1921, 94 per cent of the global market. Some 90.7 per cent of British beef came from Argentina.13 The British ambassador in 1929 boasted that “Argentina must be regarded as an essential part of the British empire.”14 Washington took up free trade as it gradually became preponderant in the whole of Latin America. It is easy to see why; free trade made countries dependent on export markets, and the domestic market of the United States was the world’s largest. Free trade theory, especially in the case of the more advanced Latin American economies, gradually gave way to the rival theory of import substitution industrialization
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(ISI) that became the most influential and durable nationalist strategy for industrialization in the decades between the 1930s and the 1970s. As a program for economic development, ISI had become popular due to the falling prices of staples and the corollary unavailability and rise in the price of imported industrial goods during the Depression and World War II. It became apparent that if countries were to break the chains of agrarian backwardness and feebleness, if the increasing numbers of Latin American urban dwellers were to have employment, and, if all classes were to have the basic manufactured goods for which they yearned, these would have to be made at home, not imported. “Industrialize” thus became the mantra, and ISI, the blueprint. The success of ISI was ambiguous and is still the subject of debate. Most liberal economists and historians have consigned it to the oblivion of failed economic theories,15 although Alice H. Amsden has recently provided a forceful rebuttal that has made the point that its successes have been systematically diminished by its opponents, notably including the World Bank and the IMF, both of which have advanced their own programmes in favour of neoliberalism.16 And Dani Rodrik has affirmed that “the overall record of ISI was in fact rather impressive. Brazil, Mexico, Turkey, and scores of other developing nations in Latin America, the Middle East and Africa experienced faster rates of economic growth under ISI than at any other time in their economic history. Latin America grew at an average rate exceeding 2.5 per cent per capita between 1965 and the early 1980s – a pace that far exceeds what the region had registered since 1990 (1.9 per cent).”17 Yet, Raúl Prebisch (1901–1986), the Latin American economist who most resembled J.M. Keynes, and who was prominent over the whole epoch from the 1940s to the 1980s, while acknowledging that all economies needed protectionism in some form in the early stages of industrialization, thought that import substitution industrialization in the form that it had been advocated by Juan Perón in Argentina was a disaster. It is at least arguable, thus, that ISI worked. The more advanced economies did industrialize although as late as 2000 primary commodities still accounted for two-thirds of the Latin American exports. Mexico was the exception; its exports of primary products dropped from 87.9 to 16.5 per cent between 1980 and 2000. In the same period Argentina’s primary products exports dropped from 76.9 per cent to 67.9 per cent, although Argentina remained, as in the nineteenth century, linked to the rest of the world by means of the main components of hamburgers – beef and wheat. Over the same period (1980–2000)
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Brazil’s primary product exports dropped from 62.9 per cent to 42 per cent and Chile’s only from 88.7 to 84. ISI, as much in Latin America as in Turkey or India, involved, as a first step, substituting basic imports for locally produced light- industrial equivalents. These often required the most limited of technologies and were for the lowest end of the markets. Typical early ISI manufactures were soap, beer, matches, shoes, textiles, and metal goods. At the next step came the more complex products of heavy industry in which massive investments from the state were necessary; refrigerators and cars, for instance, required steel, and steel mills needed state subventions. The problem remained, however, that even heavily subsidized goods were of low quality or unfashionable – like the Ambassador motor cars made in India or the Skodas of Czechoslovakia. They could not compete internationally so could not be exported. Since ISI industries were usually uncompetitive, they had to be kept on life support by state loans. These would have to come from the export of primary products, at least in the short term, and on loans, usually from foreigners. On the other hand, ISI did yield gains in other respects. Among these was the nurturing of a working class that not only enjoyed the benefits of full employment but was bound to become more healthy, better educated, and politically more quiescent. Throughout Latin America during the heyday of ISI, informal employment – that is, employment that was insecure and less than full-time – was reduced from 29 per cent to 21 per cent. By the end of the twentieth century, with the abandonment of ISI, these employment rates had swung back as informal employment rose vertiginously to 57 per cent of the work force of Latin America and four out of five newly created jobs. ISI worked most obviously in the larger economies. In the period 1950–60, for instance, average GDP growth for the twenty largest Latin American economies was 5.3 per cent. By the 1970s manufacturing had become a significant sector in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and, especially, Mexico. The growth rate of communist Eastern Europe in this period was 4.0 per cent, Southern Europe’s was 4.8 per cent, and Asia 2.6 per cent. The gap between Latin America and East Asia widened thereafter, with the Asians abandoning ISI and adopting export-led industrialization. In the last quarter of the twentieth century, the gap between Latin American and East Asia growth rates widened dramatically. Should we describe ISI as “socialistic”? Strictly speaking, no; we should distinguish between “statism” or “dirigisme” and “socialism.” “Statism” or “state capitalism” refers to the role of the state in an
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economy that is capitalist. In many Latin American states, the state owned the oil and mining companies, banks, railways, and elements of heavy industry. To develop these productive facilities the state borrowed heavily on international markets which, on the whole, loaned willingly, even enthusiastically. One striking exception to the spread of ISI: neither under the Batista dictatorship nor under that of Castro did the Cubans implement its strategies. Until the late twentieth century, the Cubans remained dependent on the export of a single commodity, sugar, the export of which to its natural US market had been closed off by an embargo for five decades. For three of those decades, Cuba was sheltered by trade agreements with the Soviet Union. With the abandonment of communism and the implosion of the Soviet Union, the Cubans were forced to switch from sugar to tourism as the major source of foreign exchange. Cuba’s exports now included sunburned Canadians.18 The 1980s, a “lost decade” in Latin America as well as Africa, marked, simultaneously, the last gasp of the Cold War and the last hurrah of a period of nationalist developmentalism as, under the powerful influence of the Washington Consensus, ISI went out the door and neoliberalism was welcomed in. Those who had been the beneficiaries of ISI, especially the unionized employees of state-owned enterprises, had their security, their incomes, and their political rights wrenched from them by military dictators and their successors. Having lost both, these workers came to be at the mercy of market forces. Celebration of the market as the most rational and therefore most irresistible force in the economic life of humankind had become universal from the 1970s. By the 1990s, even in the formerly statist economies of Eastern Europe “the market” replaced the idea of “the plan” (as in the form of the “Five Year Plan”). In Latin America, it was Chile, ruled from 1973 by a military junta that had seized power from reforming socialists that became the first and the most famous example of the new orthodoxy. Its practitioners were graduates of US economics departments, especially that of the University of Chicago, where Milton Friedman, the Moses of neoliberalism, ruled. Economic, not political ideology, had thus taken over from ISI as the pennant under which national capitalism marched. It had required violent political force with the usual subjects being tortured and murdered to destroy both working class power and ISI, to clear the path for its triumph of neoliberalism. While Chile thus became neoliberalism’s Latin American role model, it
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was Brazil, however, that was to overshadow the rest of the continent in terms of economic growth and to become in the twenty-first century, alongside Russia, India, and China, fellow members of the BRIC group, a global power. dictators
Now as the quest for development ran into increasingly heavy weather from the 1960s, the temptation to turn to the strict rule of the military increased, especially among large and small businessmen. Dictatorship had been as common in independent South America in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as it was in Eastern and Southern Europe. While receding in most of Europe, it flickered on and off again in Latin America between the mid-‘50s and mid-‘70s. Its military form came to be known as “praetorianism.” As in Spain and Portugal, the Church and much of the middle class stood foursquare behind the praetorians. We shall mention in a separate section below the case of the army overthrowing the elected governments in Argentina in 1955 and 1976, Brazil in 1965, and Chile in 1972. Any perusal of the backgrounds of the army officers who assassinated democracies and tortured dissidents will provide us with haunting reminders of the ideologies that sustained fascist regimes in the Europe of the 1930s from that of Franco in Spain, through Mussolini in Italy to Antonescu in Romania: Catholic piety, unflinching patriarchism, social insecurity, and especially the loss of status, class, and race hatred, fear of the popularity of communism and socialism. The parallels between the military regimes of Latin America of the 1970s and ‘80s and the fascist dictatorships of Europe in the 1930s and ‘40s were obvious to the officers within US military intelligence who – while supporting repression in Latin America – described DINA, the Chilean secret police organization, as a “modern day Gestapo.”19 Like General Francisco Franco, who ruled Spain from 1939 to ’75, Augusto Pinochet who seized power in Chile in 1973, bathed himself in Catholic piety: “Everything that I did, all that I carried out, I dedicate to God,” he professed. The most profound political effect of the coups of the dark period of military authoritarianism that lasted from the 1960s to the early 1980s was the suppression of political populism, that is, the ideology that sought to include and incorporate the working class in partnership with a tamed bourgeoisie and a paternalistic state. As Patricio Silva writes, “The military dictatorships inaugurated in the 1970s inflicted a major
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blow to the politics of populism, based on clientelistic relations between the state and civil society. Indeed, populism suffered a significant psychological defeat as many people, right or wrong, internalised the view that populism had been one of the main causes of the economic and political crisis that had preceded the breakdown of democracy.”20 But the praetorians who took power in their own hands in Latin America had a shorter life span than their brethren in Iberia. Once populism had been destroyed, the political left murdered or jailed, and the ISI system dismantled, their job was done. It was just a matter of time before oblivion beckoned. But it was obviously difficult for them to know when their time was up and their usefulness to Washington at an end. Thus, when the Argentine generals went to war with Britain in 1982 over the Falklands (or “Malvinas,” to give them their Argentine name), it was Margaret Thatcher, Reagan’s ideological twin, that Washington backed, abandoning the generals to auto-destruction and the ultimate ignominy of being reviled and then put on trial. democratization
One after another, the dictatorships that characterized the larger states of Latin America in the 1980s were thus dissolved by a combination of their own incompetence – military and economic incompetence in the case of Argentina – the disapproval of the West and especially Washington where under President Jimmy Carter (r. 1976–79) human rights were especially stressed. Military rule thus ended in Argentina in 1983, in Brazil in 1985, and in Chile in 1988, while the Duvalier regime in Haiti had come to an end two years earlier. The decade of Third and Second World democratic change – the “third wave of democratization” – had thus washed against the shores of Latin American. Would democracy lead to economic betterment to the poor and the destitute? The civilian regimes that followed the militaries were led by politicians who became the prefects of the new, post-ISI, developmental regimes centred on neoliberalism. These regimes acted under the supervision of the World Bank and the IMF but most of all served the multinationals. The neoliberalism that they installed disparaged any kind of economic protectionism and opened up all economies to the unfettered penetration of foreign capitalism. In return, the promise of neoliberalism was that trade now loosened from the fetters of statist interference would stimulate foreign investment and, no less importantly, new loans to pay off earlier loans. More capital would be made available by the
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selling off, that is, privatization, of state-owned enterprises; the family silver would go to pay off the mortgage. This global phenomenon, which began in most countries in the 1980s and continued more vigorously with the “shock therapy” that was applied to the former USSR, peaked at the beginning of the twenty-first century (but not in Chile, where it had been applied right after the 1972 coup) with Latin America selling off more public assets than any other region. Ownership and control of banks, telecommunications, oil, gas, petrochemicals, and utilities such as water, transport, and electricity, were sold as part of a squandermania that was visited on Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Paraguay. The few grew fabulously rich; the global oligarchy expanded as never before. The master blueprint of the World Bank showed that, in Russia and Eastern Europe as well as Latin America, there would be “irreversible reform,” that is, the virtual annihilation of the state as a player in developing economies. This would amount to what was effectively the end of history, or at least a chapter of history. But what eventuated by the beginning of the twentyfirst century was greater inequality, widespread protest, and galloping anti-Americanism. Intervention and the “transition to democracy” was a double-stroke mechanism. While Washington urged its former right-of-centre favourites to relinquish the power that they had usurped, it also gave short shrift to reformers that it distrusted, all the more so if they ruled over the tiny and virtually defenceless states of the Caribbean Basin. Thus, while over the decade 1979–90 the CIA continued to support “contras” against the revolutionary government of Nicaragua, in 1989 it made it clear that a “free” election was expected. This was an election that the revolutionary Sandinista regime could not win, since Washington let it be known that if they did, blood-letting would continue. Earlier, in 1983, the US had launched a full-scale air and sea invasion of tiny Grenada, and in December 1989 US forces invaded Panama and “took out” its corrupt dictator, Manuel Noriega, a drug-dealer and moneylaunderer and formerly a key US ally. Later, in 2004 the US and its allies, including Canada, deposed the popular and reforming president of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, while few years later, in 2009, the State Department was active in the overthrow of the democratically elected regime in Honduras. It failed, however, in its attempt at “regime change” in Venezuela, as we shall see below.21 From the decade that began with the first invasion of Iraq in January 1991 and which continued through the “War on Terror” in Iraq and
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Afghanistan, Latin America ceased to be, in the minds of the strategists in Washington, a zone of crisis, a “hot” place. It had obviously been decided, as President Nixon had once suggested, that Latin America didn’t really matter, at least by comparison to the Middle East and what later became known as “Afpak,” the northern tier of South Asia. And then there was North Korea and China. For Latin Americans, on the other hand, the sense of crisis has persisted. Although the dictators and the death squads had disappeared, the questions of debt, of economic development, and of national sovereignty lingered on. In the pages below I will give an account of Argentina (population: 40.5 million [2010]), Brazil (population: 195 million [2010]), and Mexico (population: 113.5 million [2010]) that together comprise 60 per cent of Latin America’s 500 million people. I will add a note on Cuba (population: 11.25 million [2010]) mainly on account of its radical exceptionalism to the rule of hemispheric capitalism. iou
By 1980 Brazil’s foreign debt represented 259 per cent of its annual foreign earnings. In common with other governments in the region, civilian and military, the Brazilians had fallen into deep debt while attempting to industrialize and/or modernize their military and keep the population contented or, at least, under control. Right across the region, spending increasingly came to rely on loans. Runaway inflation followed and financial ruin beckoned. By mid-1982 the economic fortunes of Latin America had hit bottom. Growth fell from 5.8 per cent in 1980 to 1.2 per cent in 1981. “From a region of global promise Latin America became synonymous with problems – debt, dictatorship, depression, and drugs – and its leverage became the humiliating threat of international financial insolvency.”22 The IMF and the Western banks were now in the driver’s seat and stepped in with programs of structural adjustment – often referred to as “free market reform” – which offered more loans only in return for a commitment to financial stringency and deregulation, notably the withdrawal of the state from the economy. In the short term, at least, this worked. By the 1990s, inflation had been reduced, public debts diminished, and subsidies phased out. Those who supported the new economic regimes applauded noisily in the media and on the political hustings. Gone, however, were the dreams of industrialization – the key words became “comparative advantage” and “cheap labour.” Latin
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Poverty and destitution in Latin America, 1980–2002, as a percentage of total population Below Poverty Line
Below Extreme Poverty Line
Year
Total
Total
1980
40.3
18.6
1990
48.3
22.5
2000
42.5
18.1
2002
44.0
19.4
Comparison of growth by regions (% average annual growth rate) 1965–80
1980–89
1990–2000
World
4.1
3.1
2.6
Latin America
6.1
1.6
3.3
Sub-Saharan Africa
4.2
2.1
2.4
East Asia
7.3
7.9
7.2
South Asia
3.7
5.1
5.6
(All figures from Robinson, Latin America and Global Capitalism, 252, 254, 255)
America’s fate was now to revert to production for export, using unskilled manpower, of cheap food, and raw materials – copper, iron ore, grapes, soy, beef, fish, as well as oil and gas. In the cities, now devoid of public services, unemployment increased and slums festered. In the countryside, agribusinesses increasingly took over the land while smallholders were driven into the cities, as well, in the case of Mexico and Central America, across the Rio Grande into the United States. Some, in Bolivia and Columbia, found salvation in coca production. Yet, as we shall see in the case of Argentina, economic crisis continued. Brazil and all the countries that subscribed to this program were now leaner and meaner; some businessmen had made monstrous profits from purchasing state assets at fire-sale prices; and the poor were on their own. So were the workers whose jobs had disappeared or had been turned from full to part time; this struck the Chileans first, of course, as Chile was the nursery for continental neoliberalism. And, of course, inequalities became even more manifest. “Chile, one of the richest countries with the best record of free-market reform, had an index of inequality worse than Nicaragua or Honduras and roughly the same as Guatemala, the three poorest and most backward countries, and Brazil, the region’s economic giant, was the third most unequal after Paraguay
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and Bolivia.”23 Nevertheless, if the situation appeared stable, especially as a consequence of the expansion of world trade from 2002, it changed quite dramatically as capitalism lurched into crisis in 2007. argentina
Argentina has claim to a certain fame as the home of “Peronism,” a populist ideology that stressed cooperation as opposed to conflict between the state, capital, and the unionized working class. Juan Perón, a colonel who was first elected in 1946 and then again in 1951 and, after an exile of eighteen years, in 1973, stressed the division between the rich and the poor: “Argentina was a country of fat bulls and undernourished peons,” he said in 1946. To fatten the peons he allowed wage hikes – 12.6 per cent in 1947 and 5.3 per cent in 1948 – while fixing the prices of farm products. Naturally, the burguesía pampeana detested him, never more than when a Perónista crowd pillaged the Jockey Club, their cherished haven, or Perón abandoned his alliance with the Church, legalized divorce, and put parochial schools under state control. Slightly more reasonably, they blamed him for the farming crisis of the late 1940s and early ‘50s. Nor was he a favourite of foreigners; he nationalized the albeit run-down British-owned railway system, the American-owned telephone company, and the French-owned dock facilities. In 1947 he paid off the whole of Argentina’s foreign debt. All of these nationalist and of course popular moves were, as we shall see, later reversed, and Argentina became, once again, foreign-owned and profoundly indebted. Perón had succeeded, at least for a brief moment, in guiding the Argentine state along a developmental path that saw the country continue as an economic leader in Latin America. He did this during the first decades of the Cold War when local conservatives, largely within the upper and middle class and especially within the army and the Church, were preoccupied with preventing the radicalization of the working class, and especially its shift in the direction of nationalism and socialism. The undoing of Peronism came when he, and his third wife,24 Isabel, who succeeded him, were overthrown in a military coup in March 1976, a dozen years after that in Brazil in 1964. But Peronism was more than developmentalism plus anti-American populism, and this is why certain quite liberal economists, as well as nationalists, disliked it. While Latin America’s most eminent economic
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planner, Raúl Prebisch, supported import substitution he looked askance at Perón’s actual program that involved printing money, subsidies, a bloated public sector, unrestrained military spending, and the support for uncompetitive small industries throughout the country. It was, he thought, a sure recipe for inflation, debt and, ultimately, economic constipation. Isabel Perón was replaced by the army chief of staff, General Jorge Videla, who turned out to be one of the most implacable monsters in the political history of Latin America. The years between 1976 and 1983 were the most agonizing in Argentine history; for this was the sunless age of military rule, dungeons, and mass terror. Of Videla, the American columnist Jack Anderson claimed that he was “one of the most flagrant violators of human rights since the mad dictator of Uganda, Idi Amin.”25 In these few years, roughly the same span of time in which the Nazis dominated Germany (1934–45), as many as 30,000 Argentines were murdered by state-supported death squads while hundreds were tortured and thousands were terrorized. For those whom they destroyed, a new term was invented, los desaparecidos (“the disappeared”).26 In the view of Edgar Dosman, Argentina’s descent into barbarism under Videla and his successor was worse than that of Chile.27 The military hierarchy of Argentina and the death squads that they commanded were linked to their opposite numbers in Chile, Uruguay, Brazil, and Paraguay through Condor, a Washington-supported state terrorist organization that served as a continent-wide Gestapo in the Southern Cone. Through the Condor organization these five states became involved in “committing human rights violations on a massive scale never before seen in Latin America.”28 Washington may have been on the whole uneasy about dictatorship and about the “Dirty War” waged by the Condor organization but for the most part accepted both, as a Cold War necessity, at least until assassination of Latin American dissidents moved to US soil. The matter of the long arm of Latin Americas dictatorship came to a head when Orlando Letelier, Chilean minister of foreign affairs under Allende, was assassinated by a car bomb in the middle of Washington, DC in September 1976. The bomb was placed by an agent of the Chilean secret service, DINA, that was connected with the Condor organization. Beneath the politics of repression lay the economics of crisis. Already by the mid-1950s, Argentina had entered a period of increased uncertainty with per capita income barely growing at the low rate of 1.3 per cent, less than half of that of India. By the 1960s, inflation had reached
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30 to 40 per cent. As incomes and purchasing power dropped, the spectre of stagnation loomed and political confrontation increased. The generals who stepped in could not solve the problem of stagnation; they could, however, try to hold the lid down on protest and thus on the incomes of the working class. But even here their capacity for problem-solving was bound to be limited. Running out of options, they finally went too far by engaging Britain in a war over the Falkland Islands (las Malvinas) in 1982. The chant “Las Malvinas son Argentinas” was bound to fall short against the British military, which was one of NATO’s most practiced and well-armed and had long traditions of slaughtering people in the global South. The war, an oddity inasmuch as it was between two of America’s most dogged allies, was calamitous for the generals who trooped off the stage in disgrace to later be indicted on charges of crimes against humanity. With its termination came the return of the same cycle of ineffective politics that had been suspended when the military intervened. The first civilian politician to become the president of Argentina after the period of military rule was Raúl Alfonsin, who took office in December 1983. Two years later a civil court sentenced five of Argentina’s former military leaders to prison. By this time – with the “lost decade” of the 1970s behind them – neoliberalism was being touted globally. Its advocates? Locally, the Peronista faithful, now marching behind the banners of the newly invented Justicialist Party, and the leadership of Carlos Menem (r. 1989–99), a conservative infatuated with the ideas of Margaret Thatcher, one of the new ideologies’ main proponents. Following the neoliberal program of Thatcherism and Reaganism, the Argentine economy was now flung open to foreign investment and ownership and the assets of the state sold off at bargain prices – when Menem came to power, thirty-six of the country’s most important firms were owned by foreigners; in 1998 when he exited, foreigners owned sixty-seven. “By 1994, 90 per cent of all state enterprises had been sold to private companies, including Citibank, Bank Boston, France’s Suez and Vivendi, Spain’s Repsol and Telefonica. Before making the sales Menem … had generously performed a valuable service for the new owners: they had fired roughly 70,000 of their workers.”29 The opening up of the Argentine economy after the years of nationalism and military rule saw a flood of foreign goods enter the country and the possession of those with cash and credit. The middle class rejoiced, the national debt, underpinned by IMF loans, skyrocketed, and corruption increased. Job losses went through the roof.
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Menem went down to defeat in 1999 and was followed by a succession of governments that could do no more than worsen Argentine’s economic problems. Riots and looting ensued while debt and capital flight drained wealth from the country and the incomes of both the middle and the working class – 24 per cent of bank deposits actually fled the country. According to the daily La Nación, 56 per cent of the population lived in poverty while 17 per cent found it difficult to have a single meal daily. “Consumption even of basic foodstuffs has been declining in Argentina, which is both a reflection of the continuing recession and one of the elements that is keeping it going; declining consumption has led to a string of failures of businesses producing consumer goods. The IMF meanwhile stepped in to bail the country’s economy – later admitting that this was a mistake. “Argentina, once the wealthiest land in Latin America, was now a showcase of economic and political bankruptcy.”30 “Comes the moment, comes the man.” After a fiscal crisis in 2002 during which the spectre of loan default loomed and anti-Americanism (in the form of a revulsion for the IMF and Argentina’s US creditors) rose from its grave, a new president arrived to save the day. This was Nestor Kirchner, a minor Peronist functionary, who defaulted on Argentina’s international debt,31 and later renegotiated it with lower payments, and shifted the country’s foreign policy in a nationalist and radical direction by conspicuously embracing Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez. In 2006 GDP growth rose to a healthy 7.9 per cent, and the next year Kirchner was succeeded by his wife, Cristina Fernandez Kirchner. Yet Perón’s earlier dream of greater equality was still far short of realization. According to a 2007 survey, “of every $100 generated by the process of economic growth [since 2003], $62.5 went to the wealthiest 30 per cent, leaving $37.5 to be shared out between the remaining 70 per cent of the population, the poorest 70 per cent of the population gain[ing] only $12.8.”32 Poverty remained, in 2008, at 34 per cent, higher than it was in the 1990s. And as far as the role of the United States in the world (including, presumably, Argentina), a Chicago Council on Global Affairs Multinational Survey of 2007 disclosed that 84 per cent of Argentines rejected the idea that the United States “should continue to play the role of pre-eminent world leader.”33 brazil
Brazil is the India of the Americas: massive, rich, unequal, invariably capitalist, intellectually radiant, and ecologically disastrous. The difference
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between the two is Brazil’s recent history of militarism and the forms of child abuse: India is famous for its exploitation of child labour, Brazil for its child sex tourism. Both are members of the BRIC group of emergent large economies. Under President Getúlio Vargas (r. 1930–45, 1951–54), a populist in the image of Perón, a program of ISI was implemented that moved the country away from dependency on exports like coffee and towards greater industrial production. This led to a shift from the countryside towards the cities like Sao¯ Paulo and Rio de Janeiro and to the growth of both an urbanized working class and an expanded middle class. For the rural oligarchs this was nothing if not bad news. For the state bureaucracy, which swelled with Vargas’s dirigisme, the news was all good. Vargas, however, could not keep his fingers out of the till; he committed suicide while on the radio when his corruption was exposed. In Cuba, Prío Socarrás had done the same thing in May 1947, but for a different reason. Vargas’s attempts to sell off such valuable possessions as the state-owned oil company, Petrobras, had met with resolute opposition. “O Petroleo e Nosso” (“the petroleum is ours”), cried the nationalists. Vargas’s successor was Juscelino Kubitschek (r. 1954–60), an economic modernizer with an erector complex who promised fifty years progress in five and who built the new capital of Brasilia deep in the country’s hinterland. Brazil now entered one of its periods of turbodriven economic growth with both the production of intermediate and capital goods expanding. In 1964 a report for the Economic Council for Latin America (ECLA) commented on the Brazilian state’s achievements: it owned and operated most inland rail and waterway transport, its petroleum production, its steel making capacity, its electrical energy production, and its iron and steel production. The end of Kubitschek’s tenure overlapped with the Cuban revolution and the corollary panicky shift of Washington’s attitude to Latin America. This was made all the more critical by Brazil’s growing antiAmericanism. Janos Quadros (r. 1960–61) did nothing to quell American fears when he legislated a tax on profits exported to the United States and cold-shouldered the American-inspired “Alliance for Progress,” meant to be an antidote to the inspiring effects of the Cuban Revolution that we will discuss below. Quadros’s award of a notable honour to Che Guevara did little to quell the fears of the anti-communists. Yet Quadros’s tenure as president lasted a mere six months and saw the beginnings of an intensification of CIA activities in Brazil. He was succeeded by his vice-president, the populist Joao “Jango” Goulart, who
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saw himself as Vargas’s spiritual successor in the struggle to free Brazil from foreign domination. Goulart was overthrown in a military coup on 1 April 1964. He was replaced by the pro-American reactionary, General Humberto de Castelo Branco, a close friend of the CIA chieftain General Vernon Walters. darkness
Dictatorship in Brazil lasted for two decades from 1964 and has been considered the most dismal period in the history of the nation. Tens of thousands were arrested, many of whom were tortured and murdered, while the programme of ISI was abandoned in favour of opening up the country to foreign capital and especially multinational firms. Growth was furious; one spoke at the time of the “Brazilian miracle.” Business writers hinted that the sacrifice of democracy was an acceptable price for growth. The major beneficiaries of the miracle were, unsurprisingly, those in the top deciles of the population, that is, the rich. The top 10 per cent of the population absorbed a full 75 per cent of the total gain in Brazilian income in 1964–75. By 1983 a government study was able to show that 70 per cent of the population had a daily caloric intake “lower than necessary for human development.”34 One study in the 1970s showed that the number of abandoned and needy children was as high as fifteen million. Another, focusing on the north of the country, showed that nearly 45 per cent of children had been abandoned by their families.35 This was worse than India. The generals were shopaholics. Between 1974 and 1977 Brazil’s debt went up from $12 billion to $50 billion. The IMF had loaned more money to Brazil than to any other single country in Latin America. By 1980 Brazil’s debt payments represented 259 per cent of its total earnings. Fearful of their declining popularity, the junta began to release their grip on society. Protests increased; even the bourgeoisie was unnerved. Regime collapse was inevitable. Military rule ended in 1985. Old politicians, José Sarney and Fernando Collor de Mello, ruled in the 1990s, the first hour of neoliberalism, when the idea of selling off state assets was thought to be a brilliant solution to debt. Meanwhile, in 1982 a new political party had emerged; in fact, the party was one of the few new political organizations globally in the late twentieth century. The Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores) increasingly commanded the votes of the big cities and for a time even the middle class. Yet, the poor and destitute remained
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afraid that radical change would decrease their security and gave their votes to Collor, who won the elections of 1989, defeating Inácio da Silva, called “Lula,” of the Workers’ Party. Then, gradually, came a shift with the middle class abandoning the Workers’ Party and the poor rushing towards it. Collor’s impeachment for corruption in 1992 meant that in the elections of 1994, a surprising candidate won: Henrique Cardoso, celebrated for his Marxist critique of developmentalism. He had paid $41 million to get into the Presidential Palace, which he occupied for eight years. Yet, for all his professions of Marxism, Collor proved, in a remarkably short time, to be little different from the neoliberals who were emerging right across the planet. By the mid-1990s, during Brazil’s worst stagnation of the century, he had come to preside over one of the most socially polarized countries anywhere. On his third try, Lula, surfing on a remarkable social movement, won the presidential election of 2002. In spite of early corruption scandals, Lula won two more elections with astonishing results. To his good fortune, the early years of the twenty-first century were those of the insatiable commodity boom with Chinese demand for Brazil’s primary exports – soya and iron ore – seeming limitless. But more essential to his popularity was Lula’s commitment to helping the poor through the Bolsa Familia, a monthly stipend sent to mothers of the lowest income, given on the proviso that the children had their health checked and were sent to school. When Lula finally stepped down in 2010, he was one of the most popular democratic politicians in the world (a Nelson Mandela on the other South Atlantic shore). The status of Brazil had been transformed; it was now considered one of the BRIC countries, the head of a pack that included Russia, India, and China. His successor in the presidential elections of 2011 was Dilma Roussef, a former guerrilla who had been captured and tortured by the military. By the time of her election the Workers’ Party had come to enjoy thumping majorities in both the Brazilian Congress and Senate. mexico
Just as Turkey is both in Europe and in Asia, and Egypt is in Africa and the Middle East, Mexico is both in North America (as defined by NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement) and Latin America. Its history is also woven with that of Central America and the Caribbean. Mexico’s claim on being part of North America is reinforced by the fact
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that up to the time of the Mexican-American War (1846–48) the southwest of the United States, including New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and parts of California and Texas were part of greater Mexico. But rather than be assimilated into mainstream American culture, the mainly Mexican “Latino” Americans have become a visible minority of surprising proportions. It has been estimated that by 2050 there will be as many Latinos as there are Anglo-Americans in the United States. (Incidentally, then, taking Quebec into account, a large part of Canada and the United States will become part of Latin-speaking America.) Postwar Mexican history, as we shall see, has been marked by several contradictory currents, but the one most obvious in the past decades is that marked by an accelerating shift away from the goals of the Mexican revolution towards those of neoliberalism. The revolutionary period in Mexican history began in 1910, and its final phase was marked by the 1934 ascension of General Lázaro Cárdenas del Rio (r. 1934–40). From 1938, these reforms were carried out in the name of the Partido de la Revolución Mexicana (PRM). They were both wide-ranging and deep and, by and large, beneficial to the peasants and workers who supported him. It was he who broke the power of the great landowners and redistributed as much as fifty million acres to a peasantry that had subsisted on agricultural labour and small plots, vesting these confiscated lands in communally owned collectives known as ejidos. By 1940 the ejidos encompassed 47 per cent of Mexico’s cultivated land. Cárdenas’s agrarian reform was the first in Latin America and preceded similar reforms by revolutionary regimes worldwide in Cuba as well as China, Korea, and Vietnam. With it the Mexican form of feudalism, based on the haciendas established by the Spanish conquerors, was stifled. The international ramifications of Cárdenas’s radicalism, as we have seen in the previous chapter on the Middle East, came with the nationalization of Mexico’s oil in 1942. Here, too, was an initiative to be emulated around the world. The nationalized Mexican oil-producer, Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX), has remained a key element in Mexico’s political economy up to the present. At the conclusion of his six-year presidential term (sexenio), Cárdenas was succeeded by Avila Camacho (r. 1940–45). In common with Canada and the United States, the demands of World War II had accelerated the industrialization of Mexico, increasing both its output and the size of its working class while assuring its place as the most industrialized of Latin American economies. But, while industrialization was a major force in increasing per capita income, pushing it up from 325 pesos per year in
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1940 to 838 pesos per year in 1946, it simultaneously led to the skewing of the social ladder so that Mexico now established itself firmly, alongside Brazil, as a leader on the road to social inequality. As though to signal the changes that had taken place in the country, the PRM changed its name to the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI), signifying, as it became apparent in retrospect, that the revolution had not only been stabilized, but ossified. No longer a coalition of left-leaning intellectuals (among whom most notably was the artist Freda Kalho), agrarian reformers, and champions of labour, it was now on the way to becoming a coalition of big businessmen, bureaucrats, and technocrats, the latter especially connected with the oil sector. The presidents of Mexico in the prosperous postwar years, Miguel Aléman (r. 1946–52), Adolfo Ruiz Cortines (r. 1953–58), Adolfo López Mateos (r. 1958–64), and Gustavo Diaz Ordaz (r. 1965–70) oversaw a shift away from support for the ejidos in the south and centre of the country to the expanding, export-oriented, capitalist, agrarian sector to the north and northwest. Most of these agricultural exports, initially directed at American markets, are the ones that we have come to enjoy in Canada, especially since NAFTA. This shift in the direction of capitalist Big Agriculture was underpinned by state support for easy credit, hydrological improvement, and increased technical support. By the 1960s the exit from reformism and the more visible domination of the state by capital was a fait accompli; so, by the time that neoliberalism had become the dominant dogma of developmentalism, Mexico was securely in the hands of the moneyed. Still, until the early 1970s the economy of Mexico boomed. With the increase in manufacturing output, the GDP increased at a rate of around 6 per cent, comparable to the fast-growing export economies of West Germany, South Korea, and Japan. But in Mexico, however, a Malthusian spectre loomed: the improvement to the public health of the rural dwellers had led to a sharp rise in population. With the increased mechanization of agriculture there was less work to keep the peasants down on the farm; so, whereas in 1940 agriculture had occupied over 65 per cent of the economically active part of the population, by 1970 it employed as little as 37 per cent. And between 1960 and 1979 the contribution of agriculture to the GDP had fallen from 16.2 to 9.0 per cent. The fate of most of those forced to leave the land was low-wage employment, partial employment, or unemployment. The new generation, particularly if they were landless, left the rural areas to seek often non-existent jobs in the urban industrial sector. The towns and cities
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expanded phenomenally. Industry was able to employ about 10 per cent of a labour force that increased by 500,000 annually. From the mid-1930s to the mid-1950s, Mexico’s population doubled from 16 to 32 million. By the mid-1990s it was 93.7 million. The population of the Federal District, which contains Mexico City, increased from 3 million in 1952 to 4.5 million only six years later. By the time of the 1990 census it was over 14 million. As well, the country’s wealth was distributed only slightly less equitably than wealth in Brazil. “In 1963, half the population received 15.5 per cent of the income – down from 19 per cent in 1950 – while the top 10 per cent continued to receive approximately 50 per cent of the income. The income of the lowest fifth of the population did not increase in absolute terms between 1950 and 1963.”36 In 1970 Luis Echeverría (r. 1970–76) was elected president. A populist and reformer in the mode of others in the final age of reform statism from Michael Manley in Jamaica (r. 1972–80) to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in Pakistan (r. 1970–77), he wanted to turn the clock back to a time of statism and social equality. But a combination of economic recession and an increase in US tariffs put an end to his dream and drew a line under reformism in Mexico. The state would now attempt to seek its final accommodation with capital. Echeverría’s successor, José López Portillo (r. 1976–82), accordingly retreated from any confrontation. His economic strategy was facilitated by the discovery of huge new oil fields in 1976. It was now apparent that Mexico possessed as much as 5 per cent of the world’s proven oil reserves and around 3 per cent of its natural gas reserves. Like others, on the basis of increased oil revenues, in the 1970s Mexico borrowed heavily on capital markets. Alas, by 1981 oil prices were dropping fast and interest rates were rising. A foreign debt increasing from $6.8 billion in 1972 to $58 billion a decade later had to be serviced by declining incomes. Rampant inflation was accompanied by capital flight. An age of crisis, first of one kind and then of another, had begun – debt, inflation, declining living standards, declining employment, drug wars. In August 1982 Mexico declared a moratorium on debt repayment, thereby launching a global debt crisis. Between 1980 and 1991 the World Bank handed Mexico a total of thirteen loans, more than any country had ever received. In return, in 1984, for the first time anywhere, it demanded than Mexicans drink the bitter medicine of “structural reforms” that included the opening up of Mexico’s markets to foreign investors. As prices rose and employment increased, wages were
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frozen. Employment in the state sector was cut in half between 1988 and 1994. Subsidies like those provided through the Mexican Food System were cut. The privatization of key sectors of Mexico’s economy now became a source of tremendous profit for those with the means, financial and political, to invest. “Accumulation by dispossession” is the term that was soon to be current; the citizens were dispossessed of ownership while the elite, often close friends of the president, enriched themselves at their expense. According to David Harvey, In 1994, Forbes magazine’s list of the richest people in the world revealed that Mexico’s economic restructuring had produced twenty-four billionaires. Of these, at least seventeen participated in the privatization programme, buying banks, steel mills, sugar refineries, hotels and restaurants, chemical plants, and a telecommunications firm as well as concessions to operate firms within newly privatized sectors of the economy, such as ports, private toll highways, and cellular and long distance telephony. Carlos Slim, Mexico’s richest man, was twenty-fourth on the Forbes list, and he controlled four of Mexico’s twenty-four largest firms … By 2005 Mexico ranked ninth in the world (ahead of Saudi Arabia) for the number of billionaires.37 The elections of 1988 had seen the victory of the PRI candidate, Carlos Salinas de Gotari, the author of Mexico’s advanced program of privatization – sometimes called “PRIvatization.” It was under him that the negotiations for the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) were begun and finalized, coming into effect on 1 January 1994. At the moment that it became effective, a peasant rebellion broke out in the southern state of Chiapas that shook the status quo. Why Chiapas? [The] contrast between extreme wealth and poverty in Chiapas is, in large part, the result of the capitalist revolution that has ravaged the state. For the past twenty-five years, Chiapas has been convulsed by unprecedented economic transformations that have torn up the traditional agricultural economy and devastated the indigenous cultures. The Mexican state, responding to the interests of the country’s emergent bourgeoisie and the demands of the international marketplace, has treated Chiapas as an internal colony, sucking out its wealth, while leaving its people – particularly the overwhelming majority who live off the land – more impoverished than ever.38
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Convulsion followed upon the Chiapas uprising at several levels. Within the PRI civil war broke out with assassinations and defections threat ening to end party rule. The peso crashed. Uncertainty thrived. To the rescue of the status quo came Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Léon, a PRI party stalwart and technocrat with a Yale degree. Zedillo massaged the elections of 1994 to ensure victory for himself and his party, which was being torn apart by factionalism. At the moment he entered the presidential palace, Mexico’s foreign reserves hit the bottom of the bucket. Devaluation was deemed the only solution. And as the peso devalued Mexico’s foreign debt skyrocketed, now reaching $166 billion, a sum greater than at the time of Mexico’s 1982 “debt crisis.” Horribly, only ten out of the twenty-four Mexican billionaires listed in Forbes 1994 survived. And the poor were worse off: “The Secretary of Social Development calculates that 2.5 million Mexicans crossed the line from poverty to extreme poverty since January 1 [1995] adding to the 13 million to 18 million citizens who cannot, by United Nations standards, satisfy their daily nutritional needs. That is to say, nearly a fifth of the population is going to bed hungry every night.”39 In 1995 the IMF loaned Mexico $18 billion and the US government offered the Mexicans a $6 billion line of credit. The “miracle economy” proclaimed in 1994 had reached its sad end. In 1995, although nearly 60 per cent of foreign multinationals made profits, the party that had welcomed their participation in the economy was dissolving. In David Harvey’s autopsy, neoliberalism was the poison that paralysed the party.40 At this point, ex-president Salinas fled the country, preceded by the estimated $120 million he is said to have appropriated. Several members of his family were, however, arrested, including his brother, who was accused of murder. It was widely believed that the PRI was now at the point of committing suicide, an assumption underpinned by the presidential elections of 2000 when, for the first time, it lost. The vanquisher of the PRI was Vicente Fox, an ex-Coca-Cola executive and rich rancher from northern Mexico. His party was the PAN (Partido Acción Nacional), a centre-right formation in the tradition of the Christian Democrat parties of Europe. Proposing to liberalize Mexico’s economy, Fox was frustrated by the fact that he controlled neither of the houses in the Mexican congress. By the end of his term in 2006, even though the Mexican economy had recovered to a large extent, Fox had been unable to leave any kind of deep mark on the country’s political economy. Even the maquiladoras, the factories on Mexico’s border with the United States that were established with such
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fanfare had shown themselves of declining value, their products overtaken by cheaper imports into the United States from China. In the elections of 2006, the PAN won again, with the party’s candidate, Felipe Calderón barely defeating the candidate of the more leftleaning Partido de la Revolución Democratica (PRD), whose founder, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, was the son of Lázario Cárdenas. The PRD candidate, López Obrador, complained of electoral fraud, which seems likely, but Calderón clung to office. Having been delegitimized for electoral fraud, it seemed unlikely that Calderón would be anything but a weak president ruling over a decomposing state divided and bloodied by what was virtually a civil war between government forces and narcotraficantes. The main threat to Mexico’s survival had been, by the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, the drug trade. It has been estimated that ninety per cent of all of the cocaine produced in the Andes entered the United State through Mexico and was handled by the several gangs whose capacity for violence and whose influence over the institutions of law and order threatened the whole country, especially its northern states. The precise tonnage of cocaine that passed through Mexico cannot be known, although the quantities seized can; in the 1970s around 100 kilograms were seized annually, and in 1985 this had risen to four metric tons and in 1990, fifty metric tons. Mexico-based groups also controlled the production of between 70 and 80 per cent of the methamphetamines imported into the United States. The trade in drugs increased dramatically when NAFTA came into effect in 1984; free trade obviously included illegal drugs. In the two years between late 2006 and 2008, 450 Mexican policemen and soldiers had been killed in drug-related shoot-outs, and in 2008 alone there were over 5,000 drug-related killings in Mexico. By this time other woes had afflicted the country; the recession in the United States, to which 80 per cent of Mexico’s exports were sent, and the diminution of remittances from often illegal Mexican workers in the United States, meant that the Mexican economy had shrunk by nearly 10 per cent in the first half of 2008. cuba and hugo
It is possible to encapsulate Cuba’s twentieth century history briefly under a handful of slightly contradictory headings: mediated independence, revolutionary dependency, Cold War peace, and fraternal amity.
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Under the first we see the Cuba of sugar, corruption, and casinos presided over by a venial collection of American placemen directed from the US embassy; one is reminded of the Middle East during Britain’s moment of glory (c. 1920–56). In the second, we see the Cuban revolution, a development of potent hemispheric importance and, to Washington, if less so for Western Europe and hardly at all for Canada, horrifying implications. In the third, we see Cuba as a client of the Soviet Union, semi-independent, to be sure, and hardly subservient but, nonetheless, deeply behoven. It is this Cuba, indestructible because of Soviet support, that became the refuge for Latin America’s political rebels on the run and quite surprisingly the main agent for the destruction of South Africa’s colonial ambitions in Angola. There is after this the Cuba of the 1990s that was plunged into destitution with the break-up of the Soviet Union but survived the end of Soviet support due to significant economic aid from fraternal Venezuela, and, finally, the Cuba of the present, a dazed survivor of the Cold War and of neoliberalism, yet still underdeveloped and destitute if, by Third World standards, slumless and secure but shabby. From the moment of its release from control by Spain in 1898, Cuba became dominated by the United States. “The people here … aren’t ready for self-government,” insisted the first American ambassador to Havana. In the decades that followed independence, Cuba became not merely a major source of sugar, largely produced on American-owned plantations, but also an important source of tourist pleasure got from drugs, prostitution, and gambling – a “Babylon” of the reggae songwriters. Patriots and idealists, and particularly students, were disgusted by the Cuba of the dictators Machado (r. 1925–33) and Batista (r. 1934–44, 1952–58), of vice and sugar dependency and, most of all, of foreign control. They organized themselves into political groupscules and talked earnestly about revolution, a particularly Latin American vocation. Chief among them was Fidel Castro (b. 1927), a law student who was blessed with towering stature and inexhaustible verbosity. On 26 July 1953 Fidel and his pals organized an attack on the Moncado military barracks in Santiago in eastern Cuba in order to get firearms and to make a splash. The attack was a disaster although Fidel survived. At his trial he gave the speech of a lifetime that was turned into a pamphlet: “History Will Absolve Me” (for the attack), it was called. He and his surviving comrades were put away for several months but not shot, the usual fate of failed revolutionaries. As mistakes go, this was a giant faux
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pas for the Batista regime. The date of the failed attack gave the party its name “the 26 July Movement” or simply “M26.” Fidel and his stalwarts, including his brother Raoul and Che Guevara, then decided to invade Cuba from the outside. Their landing craft was the unlikely named Granma (“Grandmother”) on which they sailed from Mexico to the southeastern shore of Oriente Province in November 1955. Like the attack on the barracks, the invasion was a fiasco. Once more, Castro and a few of his followers managed to survive and slowly began a guerrilla campaign in the Sierra Maestra against the regular, if shambolic, military forces of Havana. Their insurrection spread and became increasingly successful. Batista’s forces gradually shrunk across the island until after a gala party to commemorate the New Year’s (1959), the dictator, his cronies, and as much wealth as they could pocket, fled in yachts and private planes. The year 1959 now joined the years 1947, the independence of India; 1949, the independence of China; 1954, the fall of Dien Bien Phu and the beginning of the war in Algeria; 1956, the Suez invasion; and 1962, the end of the Algerian war, as great moments in the history of the Third World. When the Americans tried to use a boycott on sugar imports to pressure the new Cuban regime to abandon its program of nationalism, Havana turned to the Soviet Union, which not only bought Cuba’s sugar but provided the country with modern arms and industrial imports. The Bay of Pigs invasion (1961) was one outcome and the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) was another. On both occasions, the Americans threatened and then backed off. In recognition of its dependency on the Soviet Union, Cuba became officially communist. It is not difficult to imagine how this played in Washington and in the American media. Life Magazine (2 June 1961) quoted Castro: “The Andes will be converted into one vast Sierra Maestra of revolt.” From the time of the invasion of the Bay of Pigs in April 1961 until the roll-up of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991, communist Cuba unfolded, not at any particular pace but in spasms according to the pressures of world events, the price of sugar, and the inspirations of the Cuban leadership. Sugar prices boomed in the early 1970s and then slumped, leaving Cuba in serious debt. In 1980, to the dismay of the leadership, 100,000 emigrated, mainly to the United States. On the whole, by world standards, the Cubans became healthy and sufficiently fed, irrespective of what their social class might have once been and where they stood in relation to the ruling party. Sugar, exported to the communist bloc, was never superseded – by 1989 at 73.2 per cent
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of exports Cuba was nearly as dependent on sugar as it had been in 1959. It was complemented by tourism, of which sun-starved Canadians were the main customers. Nonetheless, by the early 1990s Cuba was in crisis. It had to sell off some of its resources while prostitution became familiar in the shabby streets of Havana. Yet, by the beginning of the twenty-first century Cuba, and its lider maximo, had survived. Indeed, it had found new inspiration, especially in foreign relations. The isolation that had marked the 1990s had come an end with the emergence of new allies in Latin America: Hugo Chávez, elected in Venezuela in 1998, Evo Morales elected in Bolivia in 2005, and Rafael Correa elected in Ecuador in 2006. Other governments, less leftish and nationalist, showed sympathy for Havana – Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and Nicaragua. Hugo Chávez, like Fidel before him became a radical nationalist (rather than a Marxist of any stripe) and, unsurprisingly, a staunch foe of neoliberalism and globalism, both of which remained solvents of the nation-state in the interests of the market. Ironically, however, it was the market, in the form of the price for oil, that provided Chávez with his clout. If Venezuela, like Cuba before it, had had to rely on the price of agricultural commodities, there would have been no “Bolivarian Revolution,” which we shall see below. But Venezuela did have oil and boycotting oil was a stickier proposition than embargoing sugar; after Canada, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia, Venezuela was the fourth largest oil exporter to the US.41 When Chávez became president in February 1999, he and his oil minister, Rafael Ramirez, persuaded the ministers of OPEC, as well as Mexico, Norway, Oman, and Russia, to cut output. Prices shot up. Venezuelan oil profits were used to subsidize oil exports to other Latin American and Caribbean countries and to fund social programs. Venezuela’s foreign aid program, sustained by the dizzying rise of oil prices during Chávez’s presidency, benefited as many as thirty countries and was used to help Argentina pay off its $2.5 billion debt. Chávez was also a declared enemy of George W. Bush, whom he referred to from the floor of the General Assembly of the United Nations in New York as a “devil.” Although thrown out in a short-lived putsch in April 2002, Chávez regained political control thereafter and initiated what he called “the Bolivarian Revolution,” a transformation of politics and the economy that was as unlikely as was the Cuban Revolution in 1959. Agreeing to swap sugar for oil in 1999, from late 2004 he negotiated an exchange of doctors for oil.42 Some 20,000 Cuban doctors were imported to work in the free health care system. Thus, as Venezuelans
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tankers crossed the Caribbean Sea to refineries jointly owned by the Cubans and the Venezuelans in one direction, Cuban doctors crossed to work in rural clinics in another. The Cubans were to get 53,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude a day at half the world price. Chávez went even further in leading the opposition to an American-dominated Latin American free trade zone, to be known as the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA). Free trade, it was argued, was a complement to the political freedom that had come with the “third wave” and was of course central to the doctrine of neoliberalism. An FTAA would be thus a hemisphere NAFTA, guaranteeing profits for business but few sure guarantees either for labour or the environment. Latin Americans did not reject so much the ideal of “free trade” as the particular version of it promoted under the aegis of the [FTAA]. Far from advancing fair trade, provisions in the proposed FTAA would tighten the already stringent intellectual property rules, particularly those favouring pharmaceutical industries, found in the World Trade Organization, with the price of essential medicines, including AIDS drugs, most likely doubling. The treaty would also greatly expand NAFTA’s Chapter 11 clause, which allows corporations to sue the government over actions that would diminish potential future profits. In Mexico, these lawsuits have led to the evisceration of environmental health, and labor legislation and have hamstrung efforts by local politicians to hold industries accountable to safety standards. And rather than leading to commercial integration among American nations, the FTAA as it is now designed would actually impede integration, offering a combination of incentives and penalties to compel nations to deal exclusively with the United States, thus ratifying Latin America’s status as a US province within the globalized economy.43 Meanwhile, Castro sickened in 2007 and then recovered. He had become, as Richard Gott’s tribute suggests, one of the most extraordinary political figures of the twentieth century and Cuba’s history will long be dominated by him. His successful revolution made world headlines in 1959 and created the Cuban nation, giving meaning to the struggles of the past and transforming a troubled but ultimately peripheral Caribbean island into a player on the world stage. Under his leadership, the Cuban people
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“stood up” … and understood for the first time who they really were. As a leading international presence for more than 40 years, Castro dealt on equal terms with successive presidents of two nuclear superpowers. As the most charismatic leader of the Third World during its heyday, his influence was felt far beyond the shores of his land. Grey-bearded in old age, he continued to exercise a magnetic attraction wherever he traveled, with an audience as fascinated by the dinosaur from the history books as they had been once by the vibrant revolutionary firebrand.44 Fidel Castro stepped down as president of Cuba in February 2008 and was succeeded by his brother and comrade-in-arms, Raúl. game changer ?
Since the defeat of Spain in the Spanish-American War in 1900, the Caribbean had been regarded as an American lake and, from 1945, Latin America, an American backyard. The British had come and gone, and, while other Europeans made gestures, none, except briefly the Soviet Union seriously ruffled the hegemony of Washington. Until the arrival of the Chinese.45 The Chinese interest in Latin America was as sudden as it was serious. There had been practically no Chinese investment and only a trickle of trade – around $12 billion – with Latin America in 2000. In 2004 Hu Jintao, the general secretary and political supremo of the PRC, visited Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Cuba. In 2009 trade between the PRC and Latin America was catapulted to $150 billion, twelve times the figure for 2000 and nearly half the value of exports to the US – $321.5 billion in 2007. In that year, the China Development Bank loaned Brazil’s national oil company $10 billion in return for an undertaking to supply 160,000 barrels of oil per day. In 2006 the Chinese firm Hutchinson Whampoa had taken over management of the Panama Canal, the waterway built by Americans on territory snatched from Colombia. Until it was repossessed by Panama in 1997, Americans owned the canal as the British and French had owned the Suez Canal Company. Fifty years after the Europeans lost control of one of the world’s great waterways, the Americans lost control of another. The United States has also slipped as the major trading partner of the region. In an essay on the “robust economic growth” of Latin American economies, predicted by the World Bank at 4.5 per cent in 2010, one New York Times’ correspondent
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commented on 1 July 2010, “Latin America’s growth largely reflects a deepening engagement with Asia, where China and other countries are growing fast. China surpassed the United States last year [2009] as Brazil’s top trading partner, and is the second largest trading partner in countries like Venezuela and Columbia.” An unintended consequence of furious engagement in the Middle East and Central Asia may turn out to be a loss of traction in what was formerly America’s backyard. This would not be the first time that Washington’s interest in Latin America had lapsed, nor the first instance of US-Latin American relations veering out of control. The earlier “Alliance for Progress” announced in early 1961 as a new start had ostensibly sought to repair the wreckage of hemispheric relations by appropriating the language of developmentalism. It deteriorated to take the form of support for dictatorship and an expanded program of counterinsurgency.
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Unlike the Ottoman Empire or even the ephemeral Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere, the Third World was never more than an abstraction designed and deployed mainly in anticipation of a future that was never realized. Were it not for World War II and the destruction of the world’s remaining old empires, it would never have come into being, and even when it did, it was bound to be of uncertain size, shape, and durability. As seen from the West, the Third World included those states that had escaped from colonialism and were attempting to develop economically and politically – if not necessarily democratically. This meant, it was assumed, that they would become capitalist in some form or other, perhaps run by democrats like Nehru, more likely by dictators like Suharto or Nasser. Obviously, they would be guided by nationalists. If these were too pro-Soviet or too reformist, then, wherever possible, they would have to be liquidated. This was possible in Guatemala, Iran, the Belgian Congo, and Ghana but not in Cuba or North Korea. Whether single parties ruled, as in Indonesia, or there was two-party rivalry, as in most of Latin America, didn’t really matter. As for China, with its peasant majority, its economic backwardness, and its past battered by imperialists from the British to the Japanese, it would have been a Third World country – except that, having declared for communism, it was not. In the three-world schema it was, therefore, an elephantine anomaly. The operative word for the process of Third World economic advancement was “develop.” Third World states were thus often called “developmental states” and were often said to be in the process of “growth.” These states were to be found in “developing regions.” This whole concept of the movement of states and peoples to some future, and
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presumably American, destination was the essence of modernization theory, the mother of development theory. Modernization theory can be said to be teleological in that it suggests that history, if properly managed, becomes a bus ride to a concrete destination. Ultimately, with any luck, Istanbul and Lagos would resemble Kansas City where everything was up-to-date. An inconvenient truth was that development required economic growth. No growth, no development. In the 1950s and ’60s the perception of the Third World, excepting its communist elements, was coloured by a rosy tinge of developmental optimism. In the decades that followed, however, this optimism was laid to rest in most of Latin America, Africa, and parts of Asia. “The lost decade” was a commonplace description first for the 1980s and then for the 1990s. By 1990 elections involving several different parties over lengthy periods of time – a standard definition of democracy – were the experience of less than a handful of African states; three out of fifty in one count.1 The rest were dictatorships in one form or another, some of the most bizarre malignancy. Latin America, which by 1990 had emerged from the nightmare of Washington-supported dictatorships, tried out neoliberalism before reverting to economic solutions that were nationalist, populist, and anti-American. The Third World, even in its post-1990 residual form, was unstable. Ideally, from the point of view of the West, it was a source of profit, as it had been in colonial times. Blood and treasure were spent in maintaining its dependency. Even the smallest and poorest Third World countries sought to cut the ties that choked them: Guatemala tried and was crushed; Cuba succeeded in 1959, but Nicaragua was desolated and Grenada suffocated; and then, decades later, Venezuela and Bolivia succeeded. Haiti, under Aristide, had tried to follow a reformist course but was overwhelmed by a coalition of the United States, France, and Canada, acting in the name of democratic ideals. By contrast, after the American-Vietnam War, the ties that bound the East and Southeast Asian periphery to the West unraveled as from the 1960s, these regions developed levels of economic growth that compared to West Germany in the 1950s. By the mid-1990s, with the Second World essentially a memory and eastern Asia developing at a rapid rate, “Third World” had become a dismissive term, virtually a pejorative, meaning “backward” or “squalid.” It is easy to get this sense from reading Mike Davis’s Planet of Slums (2006), the story of the Third World cities where, in fact, most people live. The normal journalistic representation of Africa has come to include
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not the equivalent of the magical cities of Asia like Dubai, Singapore, or Shanghai, but a sphere of pathetically dependent and often parentless children, sometimes veteran child soldiers, waiting for handouts. The massive slums of Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, and Lagos are choking their national hosts and becoming the Third World of the Third World. Would anyone seriously claim that they were developing? So much for the view from the First World. As seen from the Second World, especially the Soviet Union, the Third World was the home of people striving to be free from capitalism and colonialism, and following from that, to join the comity of socialist states and share in their planned economies. The themes of anti-colonialism and national liberation had a magnetic effect on many postwar nationalists and certain communist leaders had fond hopes for the future of communism in Asia: it might, thought the Indian communist M.N. Roy, “acclimatize itself more easily in Asia than in Europe.” A Leninist party with broad peasant and worker support was the best guarantee of what Marx sought in “the universal liberation of mankind.”2 Through the 1970s, it seemed even in the West, that the communist system in Eurasia was viable and might even work elsewhere. Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, North Korea, and, of course, China, were the proofs of this. As far as Africa was concerned, the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev reflected, “even in the jungles they want to live in Lenin’s way!”3 Yet, the appropriation of Marxist rhetoric either in order to survive or for purposes of economic or military gain – in Africa by regimes in Angola, Mozambique, and Ethiopia – was no guarantee. These regimes became inefficient, corrupt, and often oppressive in short order; although for a while they contributed to the illusion that communism might be a permanent fixture in Africa. The end of the affair came in 1989 when the party that ruled Mozambique in the name of communism renounced it in the face of relentless terror organized from South Africa. The Third World as seen from the Third World itself was many uncertain things, including a bloc of non-aligned states, a tricontinental organization seeking to escape from both the West and the East, and a world where “development” would hopefully take place. Despite dreams of independence and amity, the Third World was doomed to division and inequality for several reasons. First of all, especially in the case of Africa, there was its lack of any kind of development – social, political, economic, cultural – due in some part to neocolonialism. Second, although its ruling groups might have distrusted Washington and Moscow and were fitfully conscious of string-pulling by the old colonial powers like
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France, they often disliked and distrusted one another even more. Effective economic cooperation was rare; it was always better to co operate with Washington or Paris or the World Bank than with one another. The rulers of Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire and even the impoverished Burkina Faso actually imagined themselves to be Frenchmen. In 1985 Thomas Sankara, the soon-to-be-assassinated president of the latter, explained to a Lagos newspaper, “We depend on France, through the strong historical ties between them and us – that is, since the colonial era. But even more important is the fact that we depend on [France] because of the political links between us … French-speaking African countries are like little regions of France. And this is the reality … We get our clothes from France, and our food from France, our language from there! We are not speaking in an African language. We are speaking the language of others, which also means that our thinking and thought processes are conditioned by them” (my italics).4 Here is the essence of neocolonialism of the cultural type. Even in areas of common culture like the Middle East, states and confessional groups could barely keep their hands off one anothers’ throats; witness the Egyptians meddling in Yemen in the 1960s, the Saudis subsidizing Saddam Hussein’s slaughter of Iranians in the 1980s or his murdering the Kurds and Shi’as in the 1980s and ‘90s. Nehru, one of the most persuasive dreamers of the Third World idea, who turned a blind eye to China’s assimilation of Tibet in the interests of Third World solidarity, was dismayed in 1962 to find the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) advancing into his country. In 1971 the army of his successor effectively dismembered the Pakistan. Vietnam invaded Cambodia (1978) effectively unseating the Pol Pot regime, and the Tanzanians marched into Uganda (1978), overthrowing another unsavory dictator. In 1979 China’s PLA invaded Vietnam as the membership fee for its joining the world of US-dominated globalization. Later came invasions of Sierra Leone, Somalia, and the Congo by their neighbours and the invasion of Lebanon and Gaza by the Israelis. Without falling into the trap of the kind of breathless Sinophilia that briefly became common among certain Western writers, we are bound to make the point that by the 1980s, before the Second World disappeared, an entirely new “world” had come into existence in East and Southeast Asia. Following Japan into the status of modern industrial states had come the “Tigers” and after them, China. No escape from underdeveloped status was in fact more amazing than China’s. At the death in 1976 of Mao Zedong, China was communist and had a centrally planned and introverted economic system. A decade later it had
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launched itself as an economic superpower, sustained by the capital of overseas Chinese and investment by US multinationals and propelled by its conversion to the policy of economic extroversion. Complacency was the first reaction in the West; visions of sugary profits danced in the heads of American and European writers – Three Billion New Capitalists was the title of Clyde Prestowitz’s 2005 book. This enthusiasm soon changed to foreboding and then outright alarm, notably when a Chinese government official noted that China’s foreign exchange reserves included more than $1.5 trillion US dollars.5 China had also become a worry to more of its Asian neighbours, not just Tibet and Vietnam by the 1990s. “Most of China’s neighbors react to the mainland’s industrial rise with a mix of alarm and despair. Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan fear a ‘hollowing out’ of their industries, as factories move to low-cost China. South-East Asia worries about ‘dislocation’ in trade and investment flows.”6 In this brave world born in the 1990s, a new core was emerging around a China that had its own peripheries, first in Southeast and Central Asia, then in Africa and Latin America, but also, possibly, in Australia and Canada, both resource-rich and accessible. America, even in the eyes of such a faithful clients as South Korea and Japan was losing alongside its universal appeal, its commercial, financial, and military centrality, that is, its “coreness.”7 We might end here by asking how many worlds or cores or peripheries or civilizations have come into existence by 2012? Has globalization destroyed borders and created a flat, prosperous, earth, as its admirers have prophesized? Will development in the ravaged states of Africa really eventuate? Which way will the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) go? These are the questions that cannot yet be answered. The book that precedes has attempted, in album form, to consider the rise, division, and demise of the worlds that were born in the aftermath of the Second World War, mutated in the decades that followed, and then, in some cases, actually disappeared to precipitate out in different forms and follow different fortunes in the twenty-first century.
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Notes
preface
1 Madeleine Albright qtd. in Johnson, Nemesis, 17. chapter one
1 In the period between 1937 and 1945, fourteen million Belarussians, Ukrainians, Poles, Jews, and others were slaughtered on orders from Moscow and Berlin, and the murder of even more was contemplated. 2 Gérard and Lévy, The Crisis of Neoliberalism, 9. The authors refer to the “international neoliberal order” as a stage of imperialism. Other writers use the term “neocolonialism” to refer to the entire postcolonial imperial system. 3 Pomeranz writes of “the exceptional scale of the New World windfall [and] the exceptionally coercive aspects of colonization.” These coercive aspects included most notably the forced labour of the indigenous peoples of the Spanish Empire and the system of New World slavery. He writes also that “the slave trade and overseas coercion generally were crucial to European capital accumulation.” Pomerantz, The Great Divergence, 11, 161, 185. 4 Chalmers Johnson, The Sorrows of Empire, 1. 5 For the distinction between “mass killing” and “genocide,” consider Timothy Snyder, Bloodlands, 412–13. The slaughter of Chinese in Asia by Japanese imperialists never matched the deaths caused by Mao Zedong’s policies during the great famine of 1958–62. 6 Such claims are often shrouded in mystical or millenarian language, as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s assertion, made in 2009, that, “We have within our power to create the world over again … Today we are called upon to use
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Notes to pages 7–19
that power.” The subject of the verb “called” is, presumably, some form of metaphysical “destiny.” Clinton qtd. in Bacevich, Washington Rules, 20. 7 Dower, Cultures of War, 82. Dower puts the American seizure of the Philippines on a par with the German atrocities in Africa, suggesting widespread racism, torture, and the killing of at least 200,000 Filipino civilians. 8 The best-known theorist of imperialism is J.A. Hobson. His ideas were published in 1902 in Imperialism: A Study. V.I. Lenin later popularized the concept in a work of his own. Hobson’s argument was that imperialism was promoted, among others, by arms dealers, stock-jobbers, and contractors, the very people who profited from the later invasion of Iraq. Weak countries, he thought, needed colonies to protect their investments. 9 Qtd. in Hobsbawm, The Age of Empire, 66–7. 10 Baranowski, Nazi Empire, 38. 11 Vandewalle, History of Modern Libya, 31. 12 Pomeranz and Topik, The World that Trade Created, 16–18. 13 Bacevich, Washington Rules, dust cover. 14 The German invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939 is customarily seen as the beginning of World War II. Figures for war casualties are in a state of constant revision. However, often forgotten is the Great Asian War, 1931–45: “the most general conflict in Southeast Asia in which 24 million died.” Bayly and Harper, Forgotten Wars, 7. 15 Brown, Rise and Fall of Communism, 139. 16 Andrew Bacevich, in “Life at the Dawn of the American Century,” writes that “the bottom fell out” between November 2006 and November 2008. Bacevich, ed., Short American Century, 12. 17 Bacevich, ed., Short American Century, 18. For a fuller discussion of Luce’s vision, see Bacevich, ed., Short American Century. 18 In 1851, at the peak of its commercial and industrial power, Britain produced 41 per cent of the world’s trade in manufactures. By the end of the 1950s, this was down to 14.5 per cent (figures from Hennessy, Having It So Good, 46). Even the leaders of Britain’s leftist Labour Party had a jaundiced view of independence for some of their colonies. The Labour Prime Minister Herbert Morrison (1945–51) commented that giving Africans independence was comparable to “giving a child of ten a latch-key, a bank account and a shotgun.” Qtd. in Judt, Postwar, 280. 19 Mason, Development and Disorder, 419. 20 Judt, Postwar, 278. 21 Leffler, Preponderance of Power, 2–3. 22 Kolko, Age of War, 3.
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23 “As late as December 1947 even Bevin [the British Prime Minister] thought Russia less of a threat than a future, resurgent Germany” (Judt, Postwar, 112). One wit described the purpose of NATO (est. 1949) being to keep the Americans in (Europe), the Russians out, and the Germans down. By 2010, the Americans were down, the Germans up in arms, the Russians still out, and the Chinese everywhere. 24 While he negotiated for Washington, White spied for Moscow. He was, thus, not just a man of the world but a man of two worlds. 25 Frieden, Global Capitalism, 262. 26 According to a CIA report in April 1947, “the greatest danger to the security of the United States is the possibility of economic collapse in Western Europe and the consequent accession to power of Communist elements.” Judt, Postwar, 95. 27 Marshall qtd. in Judt, Postwar, 96–7. 28 Kagan and Kristol qtd. in Gowan, “Neoliberal Cosmopolitanism,” 91. The writers were the neo-conservative twin-set of Robert Kagan and William Kristol whose advocacy for the invasions of the Middle East and Central Asia later proved to be so disastrous. 29 Lewin, Soviet Century, 155, 328. 30 Longworth, Russia, 280. 31 Albright qtd. in Johnson, Blowback, 217. 32 Johnson, Blowback, 217. John McCain and Mitt Romney, rival Republican contenders for the US presidency in 2008, felt compelled to echo the same sentiments. In 1998, McCain said, “The US is the indispensible nation because we have proven to be the greatest force for good in human history … We have every intention of continuing to use our primacy in world affairs for humanity’s benefit” (qtd. in Lieven, America Right or Wrong, 13). Thomas Friedman, multimillionaire columnist and flag-waver in the New York Times claimed that “America, at its best, is not just a country. It’s a spiritual value and role model.” For discussion of Friedman’s exhalation of the spiritual value of American civilization, see McCarraher in Bacevich, ed., Short American Century, 222–4. 33 The idea of the West as the Atlantic World has been rehabilitated by Norman Stone in his 2010 book The Atlantic and Its Enemies: A History of the Cold War. 34 For the origin of the term “Third World,” and Alfred Sauvy, see Prashad, The Darker Nations, 6–11. 35 Catterall, ed., The Macmillan Diaries, 551. 36 Macmillan qtd. in Ferguson, Empire, 300.
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37 Greg Grandin notes that the American-backed war against the Mayan peasantry of Guatemala that lasted from 1981 to 1996 “had killed two hundred thousand people, disappeared forty thousand, and tortured unknown thousands more.” Grandin, The Last Colonial Massacre, 3. 38 The British colony of Southern Rhodesia, like Kenya, had attracted a substantial population of white settlers in the twentieth century. It declared unilateral independence from Britain in 1965. White rule lasted until 1980 when the African state of Zimbabwe was created. 39 The Chinese had taken Lhasa in 1720, for instance. Power in the Tibetan state had depended on Mongol patronage. See Perdue, China Marches West, 227–40. For information on Xinjiang, see Karrar, The New Silk Road Diplomacy. 40 For Tet, see Chapter 3 on Vietnam. In her book Escape from Empire, Alice Amsden insists that America’s “golden age,” and the age of positive developmentalism, lasted until 1980 and was brought to an end by a combination of the Iranian Revolution and the rise of finance capitalism. 41 The Afro-Asian conference held in Bandung, Indonesia was attended by the representatives of twenty-nine independent states, including four from Africa. Since India and China both attended, the conference claimed to represent over half the world’s population. Discussion focussed on cultural and economic cooperation and stressed the need to end colonialism. 42 Dulles qtd. in Ramachandra, India after Gandhi, 167. 43 Peck, Washington’s China, 5. 44 “Radical populist” was the label stuck on the Venezuelan leader, Hugo Chávez, by the head of the US Southern Command, General Craddock, in 2005. Kozloff, Hugo Chávez, 99. 45 Peck, Washington’s China, 42–3. 46 The Condor Plan, as we shall see in Chapter 10, was an alliance of the intelligence organizations of several Latin American dictatorships. Its purpose was to counteract any forces that opposed the status quo. It was supported, if passively, by Washington. 47 Actually, many Americans were also religious nationalists. See Phillips, Bad Money. 48 Indeed, there were different names as circumstances changed. Washington called the Afghani guerrillas who fought the Soviets “freedom fighters.” The sometime head of the Canadian army, Gen. Rick Hillier, called them “scumbags.” The press usually calls them “Taliban.” They are mainly Pushtuns and often call themselves mujahidun, when they call themselves anything. 49 Maoist guerrillas in Nepal, active throughout the first years of the twenty-first century, succeeded in effecting a revolution there, taking state power in 2008.
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The influence of Naxalite guerrillas in India seems to be spreading. For a listing of guerrilla groups presently operating in India, consult the South Asia Terrorism Portal at www.satp.org. chapter two
1 Beasley, Japanese Imperialism, 111. 2 Nanjing was the capital of Republican China under Jiang Jieshi (aka Chiang Kai-shek). When the communists took power in 1949, they moved the capital back to Beijing. 3 Kimmel qtd. in Dower, Cultures of War, 43. 4 Hane, Modern Japan, 364. 5 Allinson, Japan’s Postwar History, 44. 6 The Japanese per capita GDP (2003) was $32,520 and the literacy rate 99 per cent; that of the United States, $35,200 and 99 per cent; and Canada, $22,390 and 99 per cent. 7 Dower, Cultures of War, 76–7. 8 Ibid., 332–3. 9 Judt, Postwar, 325. 10 Allinson, Japan’s Postwar History, 99. 11 Johnson, Blowback, 195–6. 12 Eichengreen, Exorbitant Privilege, 89. 13 Woo, “The New East Asia,” 63. 14 Brenner, The Boom and the Bubble, 116–17, 158. 15 McCormack, The Emptiness of Japanese Affluence, 6–7. chapter three
1 Pomerantz, The Great Divergence, 111. 2 This Sinocentric view is the thesis of André Gunder Frank in ReOrient: Global Economy in the Asian Age (1998) and may itself be subject to certain revisions. 3 Even in the twenty-first century, the Chinese Communist Party had a membership of sixty-six million. 4 Mason, Development and Disorder, 353. 5 Bowles and Rusk qtd. in Perlstein, “Chinese Mirrors,” 30. 6 The Pescatores are the archipelago in the Taiwan Strait off the southwest coast of Taiwan. Chinmen (Quemoy) and Matsu are further west, just off the coast of China’s Fujian province. 7 In 1928 the Soviets initiated their first Five Year Plan, which collectivized all land putting all rural property in the hands of the state. Soviet planners set out
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to destroy the class of small farmers, known as kulaks, shooting 700,000 of them in the Great Terror. In 1933 at least 5.5 million, mainly Ukrainians, died from hunger. Snyder, Bloodlands, xiv, 53. 8 Meisner, Mao’s China, 237. Meisner is sympathetic to Mao Zedong and critical of those who portray Mao as a “mass murderer.” However, he has accepted that as many as 30 million people perished. In his long and careful study, Mao’s Great Famine, Frank Dikotter argues that the figure was more than 45 million, perhaps eight times as many as had died in the Ukraine under Stalin (325–34). Others estimate that between 20 and 40 million died during the Great Famine between 1959–62. Link, “China: From Famine to Oslo.” Whichever figure we use there can be no doubt about the massive human cost of this murderous instance of socialist planning. 9 Wang, The End of the Revolution, 43. 10 Ibid., 19. 11 P. Anderson, The New Old World, 75. 12 Gates, China’s Motor, 250–1. 13 World Bank qtd. in Gates, China’s Motor, 250–1. In 1979 life expectancy at birth in Indonesia was forty-seven and India fifty-one, based on World Bank figures. 14 Alongside Deng were Chen Yun, Bo Yibo, Peng Zhen, Yang Shangkun, and others who formed a group of equals known as the “Eight Immortals.” P. Anderson, The New Old World, 78. 15 Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, 126. 16 Ho-Fung, “America’s Head Servant?” 24. 17 Zhao Ziyang qtd. in Schell, To Get Rich is Glorious, 115. 18 Kurlantzick, Charm Offensive, 9. 19 Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, 85. 20 Fishman, China, Inc., 74. 21 People’s Daily qtd. in Ho-Fung, “America’s Head Servant?” 22. 22 New York Times, 30 March 1991 qtd. in Weil, Red Cat, White Cat, 241. 23 S. Shirk, China: Fragile Superpower, 266. 24 Riskin and Li, eds. “Chinese Rural Poverty,” 3. There is rising income inequality in the West as well as in China. 25 Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, 7–8. 26 Riskin and Li Shi, “Chinese Rural Poverty,” 342. 27 Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, 290. I have not been able to find a clear discussion of class size in China. According to He Qinglian (in Chaohua Wang, ed., One China, Many Paths, 166–71), the Chinese elite comprises about seven million people, or about 1 per cent of the employed population, the middle class a further 110 million (16 per cent), the working class
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around 170 million (25 per cent), the unemployed and pauperized rural population, 100 million (14 per cent). “About 80 per cent of the Chinese people live either at the bottom or on the margins of society.” Wang, Chachua, One China, Many Paths, 166–71, 177. Timothy Cheek, in Living with Reform, speaks of a “small but fabulously wealthy elite, a middle class of about 200 million, a broad middle (sic) of some 800 to 900 million who strive to get by and hope for a better future, and at least 200 million bitterly poor” (90–3, 100). Among this 200 million is a miserable underclass of migrant workers estimated at between 100 and 150 million. Some 70 per cent of the Chinese population, 800 million people, live in the rural sector. 28 Riskin and Li Shi, “Chinese Rural Poverty”, 330. 29 Brenner, The Boom and the Bubble, 3. 30 Harvey, A New Imperialism, 71–2. 31 Cheek, Living With Reform, 106. 32 Arrighi, Adam Smith in Beijing, 16. 33 Walker and Buck, The Chinese Road, 66. 34 Kurlantzick, Charm Offensive, 12–13. 35 Qtd. in Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, 273. 36 As we shall see in the next chapter, having destroyed their own forest reserves, the Chinese turned to those of Indonesia, which they then depleted. Between 2000 and 2005, the outer islands of Indonesia suffered the world’s highest rates of forest loss. Dauvergne, The Shadows of Consumption, 227. 37 Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, 273. 38 S. Shirk China: Fragile Superpower, 264. 39 McCormack, Client State, 75. 40 Zhu Rongji qtd. in S. Shirk China: Fragile Superpower, 247. 41 Jacques, When China Rules the World. 42 Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, 151. 43 R. Porter, From Mao to Market, 228–9. chapter four
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Elliott, The Vietnamese War, 207. Qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 303. Elliott, The Vietnamese War, 101, 137. Mason, Development and Disorder, 304. Duiker, Ho Chi Minh, 511. Ibid., 551. Elliott, The Vietnamese War, 252. Mason, Development and Disorder, 305.
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9 Ninh, The Sorrows of War, 12. 10 Duiker, Ho Chi Minh, 1. 11 Elliott, The Vietnamese War, 438. 12 Hiro, War without End, 18; M. Young, The Vietnam Wars, 301–3. 13 Kolko, Age of War, 230. 14 Hayton, Vietnam: Rising Dragon, 189. 15 Sheehan, A Bright Shining Lie, 18–19. 16 Hayton, Vietnam: Rising Dragon, 24–5. 17 Ibid., 4. 18 Lane, Unfinished Nation, 43. 19 CIA qtd. in Friend, Indonesian Destinies, 62. 20 Nixon qtd. in Klein, The Shock Doctrine, 80. 21 Lane, Unfinished Nation, 55. 22 Vickers, A History of Modern Indonesia, 163. 23 Mason, Development and Disorder, 336. 24 Friend, Indonesian Destinies, 177. 25 Hefner, “Religion: Evolving Pluralism,” 221. 26 Hajj is an Arabic honorific attached as a prefix to the name of anyone who has made the pilgrimage to Mecca. 27 Qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 337–8. 28 Time qtd. in Ricklefs, A History of Modern Indonesia, 392. 29 Mason, Development and Disorder, 338. 30 Friend, Indonesian Destinies, 315, 385. 31 Vickers, A History of Modern Indonesia, 194. 32 Dauvergne, The Shadows of Consumption, 227. 33 “Indonesia: The End of the Rainbow,” The Economist, 14 July 2007, 48. chapter five
1 The estimated (2007) populations of the Tigers were: South Korea forty-nine million, Taiwan twenty-three million, Hong Kong seven million, and Singapore 4.5 million. The population of North Korea is nearly twenty-three million (2008), about the same as Taiwan. It is one of the most ethnically homogeneous populations in the world. 2 I deal again with import substitution industrialization (ISI) in Latin America in Chapter 10. 3 Amsden, Escape from Empire, 13. 4 Later this changed. In 1970, 41.4 per cent of South Korea’s exports went to the United States, but by 2000 this had dropped to 23.4 per cent. Exports to local markets, other than Japan, rose from 7 per cent in 1970 to 35.3 per cent
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in 2000. For Taiwan, exports to the United States dropped from 46.4 per cent in 1970 to 23.5 per cent in 2000. See Amsden, Escape from Empire, 158. 5 This section is mainly taken from Amsden, Escape from Empire. 6 Kennedy, Preparing for the Twenty-First Century, 200. 7 Cumings, Korea’s Place, 128. 8 Cumings, The Korean War, 136. 9 Kim Il-song was a nom de guerre. His real name was Kim Songju. He was born near Pyongyang and his family emigrated to Jilin in China (Manchuria) where he became a Marxist and a guerrilla leader against the Japanese. Unlike Ho Chi-Minh who had lived in London, Paris, Moscow, and China, but like Mao Zedong, Kim Il-song was a resolute stay-at-home. 10 Recall that the Japanese had annexed Manchuria, which they renamed Manchuko. 11 McCormack, Target North Korea, 15. 12 Cumings refers to this as “The Atrocious Occupation.” See Cumings, North Korea: Another Country, 21–42. 13 LeMay qtd. in Cumings, The Korean War, 151. 14 Economist qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 397–8. 15 Anderson qtd. in Lie, Han Unbound, vii–viii. 16 Chibber, Locked in Place, 247–8. 17 Armstrong, The North Korean Revolution, 117. 18 Ibid. 19 In return for the IMF’s $57 billion rescue package, known as a “bailout,” Kim was forced to accept a number of policy changes that benefited the US financial service industry and US multinationals: labour deregulation, fiscal austerity, the lifting of ceilings on foreign investment. and the opening of domestic markets. See Charles K. Armstrong, “Contesting the Peninsula,” 122; Paul Blustein, The Chastening, 140–3; and Dani Rodrik, The Globalization Paradox. 20 Blustein, The Chastening, 143. 21 During the Cold War South Korea remained an unflinching US ally, but by 2002 the unpopularity of America was climbing rapidly, while 37,000 US troops remain in South Korea’s territory. One newspaper poll in December 2002 disclosed that only 13 per cent of South Koreans viewed the United States favourably while 36 per cent viewed it unfavourably and 50 per cent were neutral. See Blustein, The Chastening, 125. 22 Anna Fifield, “Spectre of Corruption Returns to South Korea.” Financial Times (London edition), 10 November 2007, 11. 23 Qtd. in Armstrong, The North Korean Revolution, 75. 24 Ibid., 8.
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25 Ibid., 136–7. 26 Qtd. in McCormack, Target North Korea, 81. 27 Cumings, Korea’s Place, 186. 28 Qtd. in McCormack, Target North Korea, 95–8. 29 Bush qtd. in McCormack, Target North Korea, 164–5. 30 Cumings, North Korea, 199. 31 Spence, The Search for Modern China, 53–4. 32 Shirk, China: Fragile Superpower, 196. 33 In 2007 Singapore’s population was 75.2 per cent Chinese, 13.6 per cent Malay and 8.8 per cent Indian. Of the Chinese, the largest group were speakers of the Hokkien dialect. 34 Owen, The Emergence of Modern Asia, 151. 35 Mauzy and Milne. Singapore Politics, 129. 36 Cited in Hung Ho-Fung, “America’s Head Servant,” 15–16. chapter six
1 Even at Independence, nearly three-quarters of the Indian population was occupied in agriculture and only 12 per cent in industry. Between 1881 and 1941, while the population of India had risen from 257 million to 389 million, the per capita availability of food grains declined from 200 kilograms per person per year to only 150. Guha, India after Gandhi, 209–10. 2 Roy, Economic History of India 4. 3 Kahn, The Great Partition, 63. 4 Guha, India after Gandhi, 31. 5 Khan, The Great Partition, 6. 6 Weil, Red Cat, White Cat, 236. 7 Vaidyanathan, Indian Economy Since Independence, 947–8. 8 Patnaik, Whatever Happened to Imperialism, 23. 9 Chibber, Locked in Place, 131. 10 Nehru qtd. in Akbar, Nehru, 466. 11 Indira’s husband, Feroze Gandhi, an insignificant figure, was no relation to Mohandas Gandhi. 12 Thakur, Government and Politics of India, 341. 13 Chibber, Locked in Place, 250–1. 14 Desai, “Forward March,” 54. 15 Ibid., 53. 16 Ghosh, “Indian Economy,” 1042. 17 Ibid., 1038–9. 18 Ibid.
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19 Bhaduri, “Predatory Growth,” 12. 20 Ibid. 21 Ibid., 10–11. chapter seven
1 Xianjiang is officially the “Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region” of China. Its population (2003) is equally Han Chinese and Uighur. Karrar, The New Silk Road Diplomacy, 20. 2 Hasan Karrar, in The New Silk Road Diplomacy, refers to China’s role in the area as its “Silk Road diplomacy.” The Great Game was the name given to the nineteenth century rivalry between Britain and Russia over Afghanistan. 3 Under the British, the NWFP and FATA formed ramparts against foreign, especially Russian, invasion. In colonial times, more than half of the British garrison in India was stationed here. Both were predominately Pashtun. 4 Cohen, The Idea of Pakistan, 18. 5 Markovits, The Global World of Indian Merchants, 54. 6 Ahmed Rashid gives twenty-seven million Pashtuns in Pakistan and twelve million in Afghanistan. Rashid, Descent into Chaos, 38. 7 Jinnah’s natal language was Gujerati. His family were Ismaili Shias but he became a Sunni. 8 Jalal, The State of Martial Rule, 64. 9 Ali, “Business and Power,” 103. 10 Like India, Pakistan has both a head of state and a chief executive. The heads of state were known as “governors general” until the title was changed to “president” under Iskander Mirza (r. 1955–58). The chief executives have the title “prime minister” unless they were military dictators when they were usually called “chief executive.” Muhammed Zia ul-Haq (r. 1977–88) styled himself “chief martial law administrator.” After the first prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan (r. 1947–51) there were six others before Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (r. 1973–77), and a further eight, including Bhutto’s daughter, Benazir Bhutto (r. 1993–96), before the military dictatorship established by Pervez Musharraf in 1999. 11 Noman, The Political Economy of Pakistan, 12. 12 Siddiqa, Military Inc., 77. 13 Wolpert, Zulfi Bhutto, 144. 14 Siddiqa, Military Inc., 151. 15 Jalal, State of Martial Rule, 326. 16 Siddiqa, Military Inc., 26. 17 Pervez Musharraf, Keesing’s Record of World Events, 48 (January 2002), 44557.
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18 Ali, “Daughter of the West,” 9. 19 Noman, “Pakistan and General Zia,” 50. 20 The Hazaras and the Tajiks are Persian speakers. The Turkic Uzbeks also live mainly in the neighbouring state of Uzbekistan. Such minorities taken together comprise over half of the population of Afghanistan. 21 Westad, The Global Cold War, 316. 22 Braithwaite, Afgantsy, 15. 23 Westad, The Global Cold War, 330. The Saudi practice of writing checks in support of “freedom fighters” was extended right across the globe and its beneficiaries included the US-backed Contra guerrillas, whom the Americans also called “freedom fighters,” in Nicaragua. See Hiro, War Without End, 147. 24 Cockburn, Getting Russia Wrong, 45–6. 25 Rashid, Taliban, 179. 26 For a discussion of the background to the rise of radical Islam in the Middle East, see Chapter 8. 27 Hiro, War Without End, 241–2. 28 Ibid., 245. 29 In Pakistan, the newly elected government of Nawaz Sharif strongly favoured Unocal. It was the analysis of the Pakistani ISI that persuaded that “a Taliban victory in Afghanistan would make Unocal’s job much easier and quicken US recognition.” Pakistan, whose own gas fields were being depleted, was also eager to have new sources of gas. Rashid, Taliban, 168. For more on Unocal, see Steve Coll, Ghost Wars, 301–5. 30 Rashid, Taliban, 165–6. 31 Coll, Ghost Wars, 351. 32 Azzam claimed that “To stand one hour in the battle line in the cause of Allah is better than sixty years of night prayer.” See Hiro, War Without End, 215. Azzam was assassinated alongside his two sons in late November 1989. Rashid, Taliban, 176. 33 Rashid, Descent into Chaos, 204–5. 34 Ibid., 145. 35 Cole, Engaging the Muslim World, 162–3. 36 Ibid., 163. 37 Hastings, The Operators, 378. chapter eight
1 Here I follow Ian Morris, Why the West Rules, especially Chapter 2, “The West Takes the Lead.”
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2 The British fleet shelled Alexandria, one of the leading commercial centres of both the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East in 1882, and attacks by western countries continued intermittently for more than one hundred years thereafter. In 1922–23 it was the turn of resisters to British rule in Iraq, who were subjected to a policy of “air policing” that lasted a decade, with a death toll as high as 10,000. In the same decade, the French slaughtered several hundreds in Syria, while Italian fascists in the 1930s used poisonous gas, sprayed from the air, to kill Cyrenacians (i.e., proto-Libyans) and Ethiopians by means of an air and artillery bombardment. The Americans invaded Lebanon in 1958 and bombarded it from the sea in 1983. They dropped bombs and launched missiles on Tripoli (Libya) in April 1986 and even more on Baghdad in Operations Desert Shield (1990) and Desert Storm (2003). They slaughtered Somalis by the dozens in Mogadeshu in October 1993. The Israelis razed Beirut in the summer of 2006 and devastated Gaza in December 2009, in twenty-two days killing 1,330, of whom at least half were civilians and 410 children. See Hirst, Beware of Small States, 402. Resistance to Western imperialism took a religious form even in the late nineteenth century Sudan. Writing of the Sudanese leader, Muhammed Ahmed (1844–1885), known as the Mahdi, William Cleveland notes: “His stunning successes in routing [a British-led] army offered hope to Muslims everywhere that Islamic revival could serve as a weapon to drive out European imperialism.” A History, 122. Now, “drones,” already seen in Lebanon and Libya, it seems likely, will soon appear in your local skies if you live in the Middle East. 3 Owen, State Power and Politics, 10–11. 4 The OPEC cartel was formed at a meeting between Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela in 1960. Its immediate object was to gain a larger share of the profits from the production of oil. The share of profits had stood at 50/50 and was intended to rise to 40/60. In the next decade most oil was nationalized. 5 For figures concerning proven reserves, see Michael T. Klare, Blood and Oil, 19, 76. According to Klare’s figures, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Iran, and Qatar hold nearly two-thirds (64.8 per cent) of the world’s oil reserves. Note that Saudi reserves at the end of 2002 (25 per cent of the world total) are virtually the same as the estimated production capacity in 2025 (23.8 per cent). 6 Klare, Blood and Oil, 37. 7 Giant oilfields like those of the Gulf hold as much as 850 billion barrels and normally pump between 8 and 10 million barrels a day. Giant new fields tend to hold one to three billion barrels. Recent estimates suggest that the total of the world’s reserves amount to 1.7 trillion, just over half of which is to be found in the Middle East.
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8 Klare, Blood and Oil, 26. 9 Rogan, The Arabs, 493. 10 For a sampling of works on political Islam, see: Olivier Roy, The Failure of Political Islam, 1996; Malise Ruthven, A Fury for God, 2002; Zachary Lockman, Contending Visions of the Middle East: The History and Politics of Orientalism; Gilles Kepel, Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam, as well as the titles referred to below. The phrase “political Islam” is preferred by both French writers, Gilles Kepel and Olivier Roy; Roy, in fact, distinguishes between radical Islamists (i.e., Khomeini), conservative fundamentalists (the Saudi Arabian regime and Pakistan under Zia ul-Haq, and modern neo-fundamentalism (the Algerian FIS). Juan Cole (Engaging the Muslim World, 41) limits the use of “political Islam” to peaceful parliamentary parties, such as the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. In my view, Zachary Lockman’s Contending Visions, especially pages 172–7, and Gilles Kepel’s long study, The War for Muslim Minds, are especially helpful; Juan Cole in Engaging the Muslim World brings us up to date on current terms (like “Islamofascist”). The question of a primordial and in fact atavistic Islam that is a threat to Western civilization was questioned by John Esposito nearly two decades ago. See Esposito, The Islamic Threat, 1992. 11 Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, 187. 12 Ehteshami, After Khomeini, 121, 140. 13 Takeyh, Guardians of the Revolution, 114–15. 14 Vitalis, When Capitalists Collide, 131. 15 Calvert, Sayyid Qutb, 75. 16 Roy, The Failure of Political Islam, 4. 17 Hiro, War Without End, 78. 18 Kepel, Jihad, 278. 19 “Development” meant to the activists of the regime of President George W. Bush bringing a combination of “democracy” and “free markets,” aka “free enterprise,” to the Middle East. Rogan, The Arabs, 490. The partnership they envisaged, of course, was the relationship of the rider to the horse. 20 Rogan, The Arabs, 399. 21 Sluglett, Britain in Iraq, 219, 231. 22 Qtd. in Yapp, The Near East, 70. 23 Cole, Engaging the Muslim World, 15. 24 Cleveland, A History of the Modern Middle East, 400–1. 25 Harriman, “The Least Accountable Regime,” 19. 26 Cleveland, A History of the Modern Middle East, 400–1. 27 Zangana, City of Widows, 9. 28 Cole, Engaging the Muslim World, 214. 29 Ibid.
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30 In the 1980s and ’90s the clerical establishment was estimated at being between 90,000 and 200,000. Of these, some 200 were ayatollahs, the highestranking of the clerics of Shi’ism (Ehteshami, After Khomeini, 47). The civil service went from twenty ministries with 304,000 civil servants in the last year of the shah to twenty-eight and then back to twenty-one with a million civil servants by 2004 (Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, 169). 31 Takeyh, Guardians of the Revolution, 17. 32 Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, 141–2. 33 Ibid., 181–2. The clerical regime executed nearly 500 between February 1979 and June 1981, including top officials who served under the shah, military officers, and secret police functionaries, and a number of religious non- conformists, namely Bahais. Between June 1981 and June 1985, revolutionary courts executed a further 8,000. See Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, 181. Abrahamian has dedicated his 2008 book “In memory of the more than three hundred political prisoners hanged in 1988 for refusing to feign belief in the supernatural.” 34 Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, 179; Ehteshami, After Khomeini, 8. 35 Ehteshami, After Khomeini, 121, 140. 36 According to Ervand Abrahamian, A History of Modern Iran, the Iranian class structure in the 1970s looked like this: a bourgeoisie comprising the ruling family, top officials, civil and military and court-connected entrepreneurs = 0.1 per cent of the total population; a middle class of 23 per cent of the total, divided into two sections, a modern element (10 per cent) comprising professionals, bureaucrats, and students; and a traditional section comprising bazaaris, clerics, farm, workshop and factory owners; finally, the bottom class (77 per cent), also bifurcated, comprehending a modern, urban sector (32 per cent) that included mainly workers as well as pedlars and a traditional rural sector that comprised peasants, landed and landless (140). 37 Amanet, Apocalyptic Islam, 238–9. 38 Galbraith, “The Victor?” 6. 39 Ricks, The Gamble, 9. 40 Cockburn, “America Admits Failure,” 11. 41 Ricks, The Gamble, 325. chapter nine
1 Basil Davidson (1914–2010) was a journalist of colossal importance to anglophone students of African history, like myself, in the 1960s and ’70s. Not only did his writings explore an African past that had been largely obscured by colonialist histories, but his support for the liberation movements in the 1970s
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provided many of us with the positive and first-hand sympathies that were otherwise absent from the Western press. 2 Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart (London: Heinemann, 1958) and No Longer at Ease (London: Heinemann, 1960); René Dumont, False Start in Africa (the original French edition first published in 1962); more recently, George B.N. Ayittey, Africa Betrayed (1992), and Gerald Caplan, The Betrayal of Africa (2008). 3 Dilip Hiro, “The American Century is So Over,” www.tomdispatch.org, 27 May 2010. 4 Calderisi, The Trouble With Africa; Easterley, The White Man’s Burden; Glennie, The Trouble with Aid; and Moyo, Dead Aid (the French title is hardly less morbid: L’Aide Fatale.) 5 Kenny, Getting Better: Why Global Development is Succeeding. 6 This line is an allusion to William Wordsworth’s “The Prelude,” which refers to his attitude to the French Revolution when he was a young man. Full disclosure requires that I admit to being both a volunteer teacher and a student of African history. 7 The Hausa states and their neighbour to the east, Borno, drew a significant part of their wealth from the trans-Saharan and Nilotic slave trades. The slave raiders and traders from these states justified their activities on the basis of their being Muslims and their victims, polytheists. The trans-Saharan and Nilotic slave trades spanned a longer period than the trans-Atlantic trade but whether it involved more or fewer victims is controversial. 8 In 1993 tens of thousands of Hutu were massacred in Burundi by a military controlled by a largely Tutsi minority; in Rwanda the ethnic majority Hutu massacred Tutsis by the hundreds of thousands. But African politics is hardly the only explanation for these genocides as they followed from the crisis caused by the decline of the world price for coffee, a factor out of the hands of any Africans. 9 Westad, The Global Cold War, 89–90. 10 Stiglitz, Making Globalization Work, 40. Stiglitz is rather wide of the mark here. The British recruited Idi Amin on the basis of his ethnic background and, presumably, his massive physique. In a military coup in 1971, applauded by Britain and other Western powers, Amin overthrew Milton Obote, the prime minister of Uganda, who had appointed him as his chief of staff. A reign of terror followed in which as many as 300,000 were slaughtered. Amin was himself driven from power in 1979 by an expeditionary force from Tanzania, and fled to Saudi Arabia, to join other plunderers, leaving behind what had become one of the most desolate countries in Africa. Obote returned to rule despotically and murderously until he was again overthrown, this time by
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Yoweri Museveni, another dictator, in 1985. Amin had forced most of the migrant South Asian population to emigrate to Britain and other Western countries. Their property was looted by Amin’s cronies. 11 Ward qtd. in Meredith, The Fate of Africa, 144. 12 French troops are permanently based in Dakar, Libreville, and Djibouti, and in 2010 were also in the Central African Republic and Ivory Coast. 13 Bates, When Things Fell Apart, 44. 14 In 2000 the sum total of all economic activity on earth was $36 trillion; by the end of 2006 it was double that. Lanchester, Whoops! Why Everyone Owes, xii. 15 Dumont, False Start in Africa. 16 Lawrence, “Development By Numbers,” 153. According to Raymond Baker, head of Global Financial Integrity, “The amount of money drained out of Africa … is far in excess of the official development assistance going into African countries.” Monique Perry Danziger, “$854 Billion Removed from Africa by Illicit Financial flows from 1970 to 2008,” Global Financial Integrity, 26 March 2010, http://www.gfintegrity.org/content/view/299/. 17 This argument is made in René Dumont. The central idea here was taken up by British communist party writer, Jack Woddis in his Introduction to NeoColonialism. Thereafter, any attempt to define neocolonialism in anything but loose terms languished. 18 Qtd. in Meredith, The Fate of Africa, 260. 19 Other early coups in Africa: Sudan (1958), Congo (1960), Togo (1963). 20 Nugent, “States and Social Contracts in Africa”, 35–68. 21 Nugent, Africa Since Independence, 34. 22 John Schram, “When Ghana Went Right,” The Walrus, July/August 2010, 67. 23 Nugent, “States and Social Contracts in Africa,” 68. 24 Young and Turner, The Rise and Decline of the Zairian State, 24. 25 For Haiti, see Peter Hallward, Damming the Flood. The quote follows Hallward’s cover page. 26 Papa Doc (r. 1957–71) turned Haiti into one of the most hellish of Third World tyrannies. Like Mobutu, he was supported in power by the United States and France. The same powers, supported by Paul Martin’s Liberal government in Canada, turned out his reforming successor, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. 27 In The Barbarian Invasions, by the filmmaker Denys Arcand, the character Claude reminisces about Quebec in the 1960s, the years of the Quiet Revolution: “We read Fanon and became anti-colonialists.” 28 Fanon qtd. in Meredith, The Fate of Africa, 173. 29 Time qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 414. 30 Hochschild, King Leopold’s Ghost, 129.
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Notes to pages 240–51
31 International Rescue Committee, “Special Report: Congo: Forgotten Crisis,” accessed 19 April 2012, http://www.rescue.org/special-reports/special-reportcongo-y. 32 Hochschild, “Congo’s New Mobuto,” 302. 33 For a telling photo of Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands grinning in anticipation of serious profit-making and a smirking Mobutu, see the cover of Gerald Caplan’s The Betrayal of Africa. 34 Davis, Planet of Slums, 192. 35 The population figures refer to 1951. None of the main racial groups were homogeneous – the whites being of Dutch, French, British, and Lithuanian descent, the Asians being both Indians and Indonesians, the Coloureds being of various combinations of Africans and Europeans and the Africans being of numerous groups or tribes. 36 Boshoff qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 245–6. 37 Johnson, South Africa, 209. 38 Lewis, Race Against Time, 185. 39 Ibid. 40 Johnson, South Africa, 227–8; 232. 41 South Africa, Towards a Ten Year Review, 102.; Lewis, Race Against Time, 185. 42 Leys, “Confronting the African Tragedy”, 39. 43 Milanovic, Worlds Apart, 81. 44 Lawrence, “Development by Numbers,” 143. 45 Wallis, “The New Oligarchs”, 11. 46 Meredith, The Fate of Africa, 143. 47 Bates, When Things Fell Apart, 124. 48 Hiro, After Empire, 173–4, 242. 49 Shaxson, Treasure Islands, 219. 50 Moyo, Dead Aid, 105. In one table in his book When China Rules the World, Martin Jacques indicates that China gets 38 per cent of its oil from the Middle East and 23 per cent from Africa, while in another (Table 3, 322), he indicates that 100 per cent of Angola’s, 98.8 per cent of Sudan’s, 88.9 per cent of Nigeria’s, 85.9 per cent of Congo’s, and 54.8 per cent of Gabon’s oil goes to China (Figure 36, 324). 51 Numbers vary according to sources but see Martin Jacques, When China Rules the World, 328. Jacques indicates the number of Chinese in selected African countries between 2003 to 2007. 52 Berry Bearak, “Zambia Uneasily Balances Chinese Investment and Workers’ Resentment,” nytimes.com, 20 November 2010, www.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/ world /africa/21zambia.html.
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chapter ten
1 The exceptions to this were colonial properties in the Caribbean Basin belonging to Spain (Cuba and Puerto Rico), Britain (Jamaica and most of the Lesser Antilles), France (Guadeloupe, Martinique, and Guyane), and the Netherlands (Dutch Guiana plus Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao). 2 Between 1850 and 1912, the population growth rate of Argentina was 3.1 per cent per year, Chile’s was 1.4 per cent, Brazil’s was 2 per cent, and Mexico’s was a mere 1 per cent. Bulmer-Thomas, Economic History of Latin America, 63. 3 Ibid., 27. 4 Dosman, Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 7. 5 Slavery was not abolished in Brazil until 1888. The willing immigrants to Brazil were mainly Portuguese and Italian, to Argentina, Spanish and Italian. 6 Grandin, Empire’s Workshop, 3. For a list, see Blum, Killing Hope, 44452. 7 Hobsbawm, Age of Empire, 289. 8 UNDP, Human Development Report 2007/08, 229–32. Canada’s per capita GDP was $35,375. In The Penguin History of Latin America, Williamson (Table 2) provides a table indicating “Inequality and Poverty” over the period from 1965 Of countries with populations below the national poverty line, 1990–2004, Bolivia stands out with the highest percentage (62.7) and Chile (17) and Mexico (17.6) the lowest. 9 Bulmer-Thomas, Economic History of Latin America, 171. 10 Gwynne and Kay, Latin America Transformed, 104, Table 5.6 and 108, Table 5.14. 11 Davis, Planet of Slums, 4, 24. 12 In the last dictatorship in capitalist Europe, that of Greece, military officers seized power in 1967 but surrendered it in 1974. While Washington tolerated or even encouraged the dictators of Argentina and Chile, the Council of Europe broke off relations with the military junta in Athens. Regarding demographic change, the population of Mexico increased from 43 million in 1965 to 105 millions in 2007, Argentina from 22 to 40 million, and Brazil from 84 to 192 million. Cuba’s increase was more modest from 8 to 11 million. Between 1982 and 1989 the population of the region as a whole increased by 32 million. Other statistics: the life expectancy at birth of Chileans (78.4) and Cubans (78.3) is longer than Americans (78) (Williamson, Penguin History of Latin America, 371). Canadians on average last until they are 80.4 years of age. 13 Dosman, The Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 245. 14 Shaxson, Treasure Islands, 35–6.
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15 Williamson, Penguin History of Latin America, 366–7. Williamson provides a short explanation from the anti-ISI viewpoint to the question: “What had gone wrong with ISI development?” 16 Amsden, Escape from Empire, 81–2, 88, 90–1. 17 Rodrik, Globalization Paradox, 169. 18 Canadians comprise 27 per cent of all tourists in Cuba, a total of 600,000 a year. 19 Dinges, The Condor Years, 55. 20 Silva qtd. in Mason, Development and Disorder, 78. 21 The Honduran coup may have been a warning to such Latin American leaders who were attracted by the programs of Hugo Chávez. 22 Dosman, Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 486. 23 Williamson, Penguin History of Latin America, cites the UNDP Human Development Report, 2007/08 (20). 24 Perón’s second wife was the glamorous and flamboyant Eva (“Evita”) who served as first lady from 1946–52 and became commoditized as the subject of the musical Evita by Andrew Lloyd Weber and Tim Rice (1978). 25 Anderson qtd. in Dosman, Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 482. 26 About a third of the desaparecidos were shop stewards or trade union officials. In December 2010, Videla was sentenced to life in prison. The sentencing judge referred to him as “a manifestation of state terrorism.” 27 Dosman, Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 489. 28 Dinges, Condor Years, 155. 29 Klein, Shock Doctrine, 199. 30 Skidmore and Smith, Modern Latin America, 107. The admission comes in the document “The IMF and Argentina, 1991–2001,” published in 2003. 31 By 2004 Argentina’s per capita GDP at $10,880 was just below that of Poland ($11,000) and a long way below that of Greece ($19,000). Ironically, by 2009–11 Greece was in deepening economic crisis of the Latin American type. 32 Svampa, “The End of Kirchnerism,” 86. 33 Phillips, Bad Money, 212–13. 34 Mason, Development and Disorder, 67. 35 Ibid. 36 Qtd. in Hamilton and Harding, Modern Mexico, 97. See also Jorge Castañeda, Mexico Shock, 51. Mexican statistics, or their interpreters, seem unusually unreliable in this period. 37 Harvey, Brief History of Neoliberalism, 103–4. 38 Burbach, “Roots of the Postmodern Rebellion,” 115. 39 Ross, “The Gods Must Be Angry,” 308. 40 Harvey, Brief History of Neoliberalism, 84–5.
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41 Much of the description of Chávez’s policies I owe to Hiro, After Empire, 134–46. Chávez was hardly indifferent to Washington’s aim of achieving “regime change.” If this were to be attempted, Ramirez warned, Venezuela would suspend its oil exports to the United States, with calamitous results. The United States did ban arms exports to Venezuela, to the profit of Russia, which sold billions worth of jets, helicopters, submarines, and Kalashnikovs to Caracas. An oil deal with China also shifted dependency away from the US market. 42 Oil prices rose from $9 a barrel in 1999 when Chávez made his first visit to Havana to $103 a barrel in 2012. 43 Grandin, Empire’s Workshop, 210–11. 44 Gott, Cuba, 148. 45 This section is dependent on Hiro, After Empire, 176. after word
1 2 3 4 5 6
Brown, The Rise and Fall of Communism, 364. Ibid., 338. Ibid., 364. Nwaubani, “Africa and Europe: Anatomy of a Colonial Relationship,” 495. Ho-Fung, “Three Transformations of Global Capitalism,” 11. The Economist, 25 August 2001, qtd. in Ho-Fung, “Three Transformations of Global Capitalism,” 12. 7 Bacevich, The Short American Century.
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Index
Afghanistan, viii, 160ff. Afghan Wars, 173 Africa, 5, 221ff. Age of Empire, 7, 8, 250 Agent Orange, 86 Ahmedinejad, Mahmud, 198, 216 Akhund, Muhammed Omar, 182, 183 Al-Bakr, Hasan, 209 Albright, Madeline, viii, 24 Aléman, Miguel, 274 Alfonsin, Raúl, 268 Ali, Rashid al-Gaylani. See Rashid Ali al-Gaylani All-African Peoples’ Conference, 236 Alliance for Progress, 229, 270, 284 Al-Qaeda, 187–8, 218 Al-Sa’id, Nuri, 209 America. See Americanization, declinism American-Vietnam War, 77ff. Americanization, 38 Amin, Hafizullah, 175 Amin, Idi, 306n10 Amnesty International, 214 Amritsar, 151 Angola, 223, 242 Anglo-Boer War, 242
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Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) (aka Anglo-Persian Oil Company), 196, 207 Annam, 74 Ap Bac, 81 Arab-American Oil Company (ARAMCO), 178 Arab Spring, viii Arap Moi, Daniel, 240 Argentina, 20, 256ff. Arif, Abd al-Salam, 209 Aristide, Jean-Bertrand, 263 Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), 81, 82, 83 Asian Tigers, viii, 27, 106ff. Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), 98 Atlantic World, 293n33 Awami League, 166 Awami National Party, 170 Ba’ath, 194, 209–10 Baghdad Pact, 209 Bahrain, 193 banana republics, 260, 279 Bandung Conference, 27, 54, 294n41 Bangladesh, 136
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342
Index
Batista, Fulgencio, 260, 279 Bay of Pigs, 280 Benin (ancient), 224 Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), 154ff. Bhutan, 136 Bhutto, Benazir, 170ff, 172, 301n10 Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali, 167–8, 275 bin Laden, Osama, 172, 184ff, 186, 189, 204; family, 199 Blair, Tony, 220 blowback, 176 Bokassa, Jean-Bedel, 240 Borneo, 73 Branco, Humberto, del Castelo, 271 Brazil, 6, 25, 253ff., 309n12 Brazilia, 270 Brazzaville Conference, 17 Bretton Woods Conference, 19, 29, 42 BRIC countries, viii Brzezinski, Zbigniew, 177 Buenos Aires, 255 Burma, 73 Burundi, 306n8 Bush, George H.W., 218 Bush, George W., 120, 124, 218, 220, 281 Cabral, Amilcar, 29 Calcutta, 136, 141 Camacho, Avila, 273 Cambodia, 74 Canada, 78 Canal Zone, 206, 254 Cárdenas, Lázario, 279 Caribbean Basin, 263 Carter, Jimmy, 175, 188 Castro, Fidel, 26, 260, 269, 283 Castro, Raoul, 281, 283 Catholic Church, 254, 256
24822_MASON.indb 342
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 29, 95, 212, 263, 293n26 Chaebol, 117, 118 Chavez, Hugo, 269, 281, 204n44, 311n41 Chiapas, 276 Chile, 253ff. China, viii, 5, 25, 98, 125. See also Cultural Revolution China-Africa Forum, 249 China Development Bank, 283 Chonqing, 35 Choson (Yi) dynasty, 111 Chun Doo Hwan, 118 Churchill, Winston, 12, 15 civilizing mission, 14 Clinton, William, 100 Coalition Provisional Government, 219 Cold War, 15, 100, 107 Columbia, 253ff communism, 75 Communist Party: China, 48ff.; France, 75; Soviet Union, 22ff.; Indonesia, 82; Korea, 112; Vietnam, 75, 89 Conakry, 233 Co-Prosperity Sphere. See Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere Condor Plan, 29, 267 Congo, 8 contras, 263 Cortines, Adolfo Ruiz, 274 Côte d’Ivoire, 237 Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON), 23, 24 counterinsurgency, 81, 188 Cuba, 25, 87, 229, 278ff., 309n12 Cultural Revolution (China), 55–6
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Index Daud, Sardar Muhammed, 174 declinism, 109 de Klerk, F.W., 244 de Gaulle, Charles, 14, 16, 83 Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), 113, 114, 121, 124 Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV), 76, 78, 80 Deng Xiaoping, 7, 59–60, 62, 87, 127, 129 Desai, Moraji, 151 Desaparecidos, 267, 310n26 development, 28, 81, 95, 285. Diem, Ngo Dinh Diem, 78–9, 82 Dien Bien Phu, 25, 76–7 DINA, 267 Doi Moi, 88 Dulles, John Foster, 28 Dutch East Indies, 73, 89 Durani, Ahmad Shah, 172 Durani, Zahir, 173 Durrand Line, 174 Duvalier, François, 202, 307n26 Echeverría, Luis, 275 Economic Council for Latin America (ECLA), 270 El Salvador, 256, 257 Eritrea, 9 Ethiopia, 9 European Recovery Program (ERP), 21 European Union (EU), 180 Export-Led Industrialization, 40, 106, 132 Export-Oriented Industrial Program (EOI), 132. See also Export-Led Industrialization (ELI) Faisal I, King, 205, 206
24822_MASON.indb 343
343
Faisal II, King, 207 Fanon, Franz, 237 Faruq, King, 209 Faud, King, 18, 218 Federally-Administered Tribal Area (FATA), 159, 161 financial crisis, viii First World, vii Five-Year Plan (China), 53, 54 Fox, Vincente, 277 Free Officers, 202 Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA), 282 Front de la Libération Nationale, 237 Gandhi, Indira, 148ff., 150, 167, 300n11 Gandhi, Rajiv, 152 Gandhi, Sanjay, 151–2 Gandhi, Sonya, 152 General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT), 20 Geneva Conference (1954), 54, 77, 81 Germany, 12–13, 74 Ghana, 116, 231ff.; ancient, 223 Ghazi, 207 globalism, 100 Gold Coast. See Ghana Gotari, Carlos. See Salinas, Carlos Goulart, Joao, 270 Great Asian War, 292n14 Great Leap Forward, 55–6 Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere, 35, 112, 285 Green Revolution, 97, 147 Grenada, 283, 286 Guangdong, 66 Guatemala, 26, 256, 257, 294n17
2012-10-10 10:48:17
344
Index
Guevara, Ernesto “Che,” 29, 270 Guided Democracy, 91 Guomindang (Nationalist) Party: China, 50; Taiwan, 126 Habbaniyya, 206 Habibie, B.J., 96, 101, 103 Haiphong, 87 Haiti, 263 Hamas, 194, 204 Hanoi, 87 Haq, Zia ul-, Mohammed, 168, 169, 177, 179, 199, 301n10 Hashemite: family, 205; state, 206 Hatta, Muhammed, 90 Helú, Carlos Slim. See Slim, Carlos Hikmatyar, Gulbuddin, 180 Hindu Rate of Growth, 147, 156 Hirohito, Emperor, 38, 39 HIV/AIDS, 229, 245–6 Hizb e-Islami, 177 Hizbullah, 194 Ho Chi Minh, 75, 77 Ho Chi Minh Trail, 80 Hong Kong, 16, 61, 62, 106ff. Houphouet-Boigny, Félix, 237 Hu Jintao, 249, 250, 283 Hué, 74 Human Development Index (UN), 89, 171, 241 Hutchinson Whampoa, 283 Hussein, Saddam, 199, 209, 215, 218 imperialism, 7ff., 292n8 Import-Substitution Industrialization (ISI), 107, 148, 257ff. India, 135ff., 300n1 Indian National Congress, 138–40, 154 Indochina, 7, 74
24822_MASON.indb 344
Indochinese Communist Party (ICP), 75, 80 Indochinese Union, 76 Indonesia, 7, 88 Indonesian Democratic Party, 101 International Control Commission, 78 International Energy Agency, 196 International Monetary Fund (IMF), 14, 19, 104, 106, 208, 246, 264, 269, 299n19 International Security Alliance Force (ISAF), 176, 186 Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), 165 Iraq, viii, 205ff. Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC), 209 Islam, political, 201ff., 304n10 Islamic Alliance of Afghanistan, 180 Islamic Front, 204 Islamic Revolutionary Movement (IRM), 180 Islamic fundamentalism, 204 Israel, 183–4, 193, 203, 205 Japan, 31ff., 97, 298n4 Jiang Ching-Kuo, 128 Jiang Jieshi, 50, 125–7, 295n2 Jihad/Jihadis, 179 Jinnah, Muhammed Ali, 161, 165 Johnson, Lyndon, 79 Jordan, 183, 192, 193 Justicialist Party, 268 Kabila, Laurent-Désiré, 240 Kalimantan, 104 Kamal, Mustafa, 199 Kandahar, 160, 182, 183, 185, 187 Karmal, Babrak, 176 Karzai, Hamid, 180, 187, 189 Kasavubu, Joseph, 236 Kashmir, 143
2012-10-10 10:48:18
Index Keiretsu, 29 Kennedy, John F., 80–8 Kenya, 80 Keynes, J. M., 16, 20 Khalilzad, Zalmay, 183 Khalq (party), 175 Khan, Aga, 16, 199 Khan, Ayub, 149, 163, 166, 167 Khan, Liaquat, 163, 165, 301n10 Khan, Yahaya, 166 Khameini, Seyed Ali, 215 Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruholla Mousavi, 213ff. Khruschev, Nikita, 23 Kim Dae-jung, 119, 120, 124, 299n19 Kim Il-Sung, 114, 123, 299n9 Kim Jong-Il, 123 Kim Young-sam, 118 Kirchener, Cristina, 269 Kirchener, Nestor, 269 Koizumi, Juchiro, 147 Korea, 19, 33, 77, 106ff., 298n4 Korean Democratic Party, 113 Korean People’s Army, 115 Korean People’s Republic, 113 Korean War, 39, 52, 107 Kubitschek, Juscelino, 270 Kurds, 195, 206 Kuwait, 217 Ky, Nguyen Cao, 82 Laos, 74, 80 Lee Kuan Yu, 132 Lee Myung-bak, 121 Lee Teng-hui, 128 Lend-Lease, 21 Leopold II, 235 Letelier, Orlando, 267 Liberal Democratic Party, 46 liberation theology, 29, 257
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345
Libya, 9 Lie, Trygve, 115 Luce, Henry, 14 Lula da Silva. See Lula Ignacio da Silva Lumumba, Patrice, 236 M26. See Mouvemiento M26 MacArthur, Douglas, 38, 39 Machado, Gerardo, 279 Macina, Francisco, 240 Macmillan, Harold, 26 McCain, John, 216, 293n32 McChrystal, Stanley, 188 Malaya, 80 Malaysia, 88, 104, 106, 131 Mali (ancient), 223 Malvinas, 262, 268 Manchuria, 33, 34 mandates, 25, 192 Mandela, Nelson, 243 Mao Zedong, 10, 50, 57, 296n8 Manley, Michael, 275 Maquiladora, 277 Marshall Plan, 21, 107 Massoud, Ahmad Shah, 185ff. Mateos, Adolfo Lópes, 274 Mbeki, Thabo, 244–5, 247 Mello, Francisco Color de, 271 Menem, Carlos, 268–9 Mexican-American War, 273 Mexico, 6, 253ff., 309n12 Mexico City, 256 Midway, 36 Military Advisory Assistance Group (MAAG), 77 Minh, Duong Van, 82 Ministry of Trade and Industry (MITI), 43 Mobutu, Joseph-Désiré, 237, 238ff., 308n33
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Index
Mossadeq, Mohammed, 24, 212 Mouvement National Congolais, 236 Mouvemiento M26, 280 Movimento Populare Libertacao de Angola (MPLA), 248 Mozambique, 223, 226, 242 Mugabe, Robert, 240 Mughal, 160 Muhajir, 160, 164, 171 Mubarak, Mohammed Hosni, 203, 204 Mujaddidi, Sibghatullah, 180 Mujahideen (Afghanistan), 175, 177– 8, 188 Musharraf, Pervez, 171 Muslim Brotherhood (Egypt), 103, 202 Muslim League (Pakistan), 142 Mustaz’afin, 198, 213
Nicaragua, 257, 286 Nigeria, 223 Nixon, Richard, 42, 44, 56, 85, 94, 127 Nkrumah, Kwame, 231ff. Noriega, Manuel, 263 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 276, 278 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), 180 Nguyen Van Linh, 88 Nkrumah, Kwame, 87 Non-Aligned Foreign Ministers’ Conference (1973), 27 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), 22 Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), 159, 161
Nación, La, 269 Najibullah, Muhammed, 177, 180 Nanjing, Treaty of, 50 Narcotraficantes, 278 Nasser, Gamal, 24, 27, 202 National Democratic Alliance, 155 National Security Council (NSC), 29 Nationalist Party, 242 Nehru, Jawaharlal, 27, 139, 146, 150 Neocolonial/neocolonialism, 17, 194, 197, 201, 252, 291n2 neo-imperialism, viii, 4 neoliberalism, 150, 262, 277, 291n2 Nepal, 136 New Delhi, 136 New Guinea, 73 New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), 247 New World Order, viii Newly Industrialized Economies (NIE), 106ff.
Obasanjo, Olusegun, 247–8 Obrador, López, 278 Obuchi, Keizo, 47 oil, 18, 90, 195ff., 303n5,7, 308n50. See also Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC); International Energy Agency; Iraq Petroleum Company; Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC); Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX); Petromina; Petrobras oligarchs, 198–200, 256 Opium Wars, 50 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), 22 Ordaz, Gustavo Diaz, 274 Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), 43, 303n4 Orientalism, 198 Ottoman, 191
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Index pacification, 81, 82 Pahlevi, Muhammed Reza, 199, 211 Pakistan, 136, 159ff. Pakistan Muslim League, 172 Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), 167 Palestinians, 194 Pancasila, 95 Parcham, 175 Paris Peace Accords, 84 Park Chung Hee, 112, 116, 117, 118 Partai Nasional Indonesia (PNI), 90 Partido Accion Nacional (PAN), 277 Partido de la Revolucion Democratica (PRD), 278 Partido Revolucionario Institutional (PRI), 274, 277 Pashtun, 160, 172ff., 180–2, 301n6 Patel, V.B., 146 Pearson, Lester B., 83 People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PPDA), 174 People’s Liberation Army (PLA), 27, 87 Pertamina, 95, 96 Perón, Juan, 256, 266 Peronista Party, 268 petroleum. See oil Petrobras, 270 Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX), 273 Phoenix Program, 81 Pinochet, Augusto, 261 Plaza Accord, 45 Pol Pot, 87 populism, 261ff. Portillo, José López, 275 Portugal, 9 Prabowa, General, 102 praetorianism, 261 Prebisch, Raoul, 258, 267 Punjab, 159 Pushtun, 160–2, 172ff., 294n48
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347
Qasim, Abd al-Karim, 208 Quadrennial Defense Review, 71 Quadros, Janos, 270 Qutb, Sayyid, 202, 204 Rafsanjani, Hashemi Ali-Akhbar, 199, 216 Rahman, Mujib Ur-, 166–7 Ramirez, Rafael, 281 Rao, Narasimha, 153 Rashid Ali al-Gaylani, 208 Rawlings, Jerry, 233 Rhee, Syngman, 113–14, 116 Roberto, Holden, 248 Roh Moo-hyun, 120, 121, 124 Roh Tae Woo, 118 Sadat, Anwar, 203 Salinas, Carlos, de Gotari, 276 Sankara, Thomas, 288 Sarawak, 73 Sarney, Jose, 271 Saud, Abd al-Aziz, 192 Saudi Arabia, 183, 197, 215, 302n23 Saur Revolution, 175 Second World, vii Second World War, 3ff. seigniorage, 44 Shah, Zahir, 160–1, 174, 178 Sha’iba, 206 Shanghai, 55–6 Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), 158 Sharif, Mian Nawaz, 170, 172, 302n29 Singapore, 16, 62, 130ff., 298n1, 299n33 Sihanouk, Norodom, 24 Silva, Ignacio de, 12, 272 Sind, 159, 162
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348
Index
Singh, Manmohan, 153 Slim, Carlos, 276 Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 87 Songhay (ancient), 223 Sony, 89 South Africa, 25, 223ff. South Korea, 61, 298n1, n4 Southern Rhodesia, 25 Soviet Union, vii, viii Spanish-American War, 73 Special Economic Zones, 129 Stalin, Joseph, 21, 22, 51, 55 Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), 219 Straits Settlements, 130 structural adjustment, 275 Suharto, Maj.-Gen., 93, 94, 95, 99, 100, 102, 105 Sukarno, Achmed, 24, 27, 90 Sukarnoputri, Megawati, 101 Sutowo, Ibnu, 96 Taiwan, 33, 61, 62, 106ff., 125ff., 298n1, 299n4 Taliban, 166, 181, 182, 187, 188 Tet, 27, 83 Thailand, 88,106 Thieu, Nguyen, 82 Thieu-Ky Regime, 82. See also Ky, Nguyen Cao and Thieu, Nguyen Third World, vii, 4, 15, 25, 28, 285ff. Tiananmen Square, 51, 63 Tibet, 27, 52 Tigers, Asian, 106ff., 298n1 Timor, 73 Tirpitz, Alfred, 8 Tonkin, 74 Transjordan. See Jordan Treaty of Portsmouth, 208
24822_MASON.indb 348
Trudeau, Pierre, 83 Turaki, Nur Muhammed, 175 Turki, Prince, 184 Umma, 11 unipolar, viii United Nations (UN), 20, 91 United States Agency for International Development (USAID), 229 United States Army Military Government (USAMG), 113 Unocal, 180, 183, 185, 302n29 Vargas, Getúlo, 258, 270 Venezuela, 263 Versailles, Treaty of, 10 Vichy, 74 Videla, Jorge, 207, 310n26 Viet Cong, 79 Viet Minh (Viet Nam Doc Lap Dong Minh Hoi), 76 Vietnam, 57, 73ff. Vietnamese War. See AmericanVietnamese War Vietnamization, 84 Wafd, 201ff. War on Terror, 220, 263 Washington Consensus, 247, 260 weapons of mass destruction (WMD), 218 Wen Jiabao, 249 Workers’ Party, 271 World Bank, 14, 19, 58, 88, 101, 153, 166, 183–4, 208, 234, 246, 262, 263, 275 World Trade Organization (WTO), 88 World Trade towers, 218
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Index Xianjiang, 158, 301n1 Yudhoyono, Susila Bambang, 103 Zadari, Asif Ali, 172 Zahir, Shah. See Shah, Zahir
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349
Zaibatsu, 39, 109 Zedillo, Ernesto, 277 Zhao Ziyang, 60, 63 Zhou En-lai, 57, 126, 129, 248 Zionists, 193, 203 Zuma, Jacob, 245
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