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How
tyranny came to Zimbabwe - Jimmy Carter still has a lot to answer
for
James
Kirchick, The Weekly Standard
June 18, 2007
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/013/746zsgtg.asp
In April 1979,
64 percent of the black citizens of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) lined
up at the polls to vote in the first democratic election in the
history of that southern African nation. Two-thirds of them supported
Abel Muzorewa, a bishop in the United Methodist Church. He was the
first black prime minister of a country only 4 percent white. Muzorewa's
victory put an end to the 14-year political odyssey of outgoing
prime minister Ian Smith, the stubborn World War II veteran who
had infamously announced in 1976, "I do not believe in black
majority rule--not in a thousand years." Fortunately for the
country's blacks, majority rule came sooner than Smith had in mind.
Less than a
year after Muzorewa's victory, however, in February 1980, another
election was held in Zimbabwe. This time, Robert Mugabe, the Marxist
who had fought a seven-year guerrilla war against Rhodesia's white-led
government, won 64 percent of the vote, after a campaign marked
by widespread intimidation, outright violence, and Mugabe's threat
to continue the civil war if he lost. Mugabe became prime minister
and was toasted by the international community and media as a new
sort of African leader. "I find that I am fascinated by his
intelligence, by his dedication. The only thing that frustrates
me about Robert Mugabe is that he is so damned incorruptible,"
Andrew Young, Jimmy Carter's ambassador to the United Nations, had
gushed to the Times of London in 1978. The rest, as they say, is
history.
That second
election is widely known and cited: 1980 is the famous year Zimbabwe
won its independence from Great Britain and power was transferred
from an obstinate white ruler to a liberation hero. But the circumstances
of the first election, and the story of the man who won it, have
been lost to the past. As the Mugabe regime--responsible for the
torture and murder of thousands, starvation, genocide, the world's
highest inflation and lowest life expectancy--teeters on the brink
of disaster after 27 years of authoritarian rule, it is instructive
to go back and examine what happened in those crucial intervening
months.
To understand
the genesis of that oft-forgotten 1979 election, it is necessary
to revisit Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence in
1965, when the British colony joined the United States as the only
territory in history to separate successfully from the British Empire
without its consent. Five years earlier, in a speech to the South
African parliament, British prime minister Harold Macmillan had
warned that the "wind of change" was blowing through Africa.
"Whether we like it or not," Macmillan said, "this
growth of national consciousness is a political fact." Rhodesian
whites would not stand for the British policy of "No Independence
Before Majority African Rule," however, and in 1964 they overwhelmingly
elected Smith premier. When the Rhodesian government reached an
impasse with the British over conditions for autonomy, Smith, widely
supported by the country's whites, declared Rhodesia independent.
And so, on November 11, 1965, the sun abruptly set on another outpost
of the British Empire.
The move was
immediately condemned as illegal ("an act of treason")
by the British government, the Commonwealth, and the United Nations.
Independent Rhodesia was not recognized by any country; even apartheid
South Africa sent no ambassador to Salisbury, the capital. Britain
and the U.N. imposed economic sanctions, and many Rhodesians worried
that an oil embargo would cripple their landlocked country.
Over the next
decade there followed a series of failed negotiations between the
two sides. The British demanded majority rule, but would consider
at most a phased plan that would gradually bring a black government
to power. Smith, whose Rhodesian Front party was consistently reelected,
would have none of it. He spoke of Rhodesia's defense of "Western,
Christian civilization" and out-maneuvered a succession of
British prime ministers, who all had to contend with the embarrassing
"Rhodesia problem." Somehow, this tenacious little former
colony held out against the world's once-great British Empire, busting
sanctions, increasing white immigration, and keeping domestic black
political opposition at bay with a succession of authoritarian laws
that effectively banned political dissent.
Smith's obstinacy
played a role in emboldening--and radicalizing--his enemies. The
refusal of the country's whites to accept black rule created the
vacuum in which leaders like Robert Mugabe, of the Chinese-backed
Zimbabwean African National Union (ZANU), and Joshua Nkomo, of the
Soviet-supported Zimbabwean African People's Union (ZAPU), emerged.
In 1972, these two organizations started a civil war, aiming to
overthrow the white regime by force. ZANU and ZAPU viewed Smith
as a mortal enemy, but they were hardly more pleasant to each other,
in spite of forming an official alliance, the Patriotic Front, in
1976. With rival superpower backers and different staging grounds
(ZANU in Mozambique, ZAPU in Zambia), the two groups spent about
as much effort fighting for control of the revolutionary movement
as they did against the white regime. Both the white government
and the guerrillas demonstrated remarkable ruthlessness, and the
seven-year Bush war would claim some 20,000 lives in a country of
7 million.
Moderates
to the rescue
By 1977, it
was clear that change was coming. Aided tremendously by the shuttle
diplomacy of Henry Kissinger during the Nixon and Ford administrations
(Kissinger enticed the apartheid government of South Africa with
promises of greater international legitimacy if it would give the
boot to the friendly white regime on its northern border), Smith
finally came to accept the principle of majority rule, though with
major conditions. He insisted that whites maintain control of key
government institutions like the army, civil service, and judiciary.
He also required that whites have a disproportionate number of seats
in parliament so as to prevent any radical constitutional changes.
And Smith ruled out serious land reform.
Despite these
vestiges of the old regime, Smith's acceptance of majority rule
was momentous: It opened the way for a peaceful transition. For
years, Smith had tried to negotiate a settlement with several black
nationalist leaders who had renounced violence in their campaigns
for nonracial democracy. Primary among them was Muzorewa, a small,
American-educated pastor who avoided the internecine fighting that
had characterized Zimbabwean resistance politics throughout the
1960s. He was a forthright critic of the government's racial discrimination
and had supported civil disobedience and mass protest in the past.
The United Nations had honored him for Outstanding Achievement in
Human Rights. "If religion just means to go to church and pray,
then it is a scandal. The gospel is concerned about where a man
sleeps, what a man earns, how he is treated by the government,"
he told congregants. The other black leaders with whom Smith pledged
to work were the Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole, a Methodist founder of
ZANU who had been imprisoned for 10 years for opposition activities--including
an alleged assassination attempt against Smith--but who had forsworn
violence, and Chief Jeremiah Chirau, a tribal elder who had long
been amenable to white interests. Smith and his moderate black allies
hoped that if a multiracial government could be cobbled together,
black African states would withdraw their support for the guerrillas
and make way for an anti-Communist black government.
Muzorewa and
Sithole, contrary to the patronizing and ugly attacks that would
soon come from the Carter administration and the Western left, were
not stooges (although Chirau, it should be noted, was funded by
the Rhodesian government and depended on it for his status as a
recognized tribal leader). Sithole had actually led the guerrilla
fight against the white regime until the power-hungry Mugabe deposed
him. Muzorewa's speeches regularly drew crowds of hundreds of thousands,
and he was widely considered the most popular black political leader
in the country. He solidified his antigovernment bona fides when
the Smith regime branded him a Soviet lackey (as it did all its
opponents) even though he was staunchly anti-Communist. These moderate
black leaders were motivated, first and foremost, by a desire to
end the bloodshed. By contrast, Mugabe and Nkomo made it clear that
their Patriotic Front would not give up the fight and participate
in elections unless they were assured of victory. In so doing, the
guerrilla leaders removed any doubt that they had no interest in
democracy.
African
politics, Carter-style
Into this picture
stepped Andrew Young. Early in his tenure at the United Nations,
Young, a former mayor of Atlanta, displayed a naive, if not baleful,
outlook on southern African affairs, remarking that Cuban troops
brought a "certain order and stability" to wartorn Angola.
Young had earlier called Smith a "monster" and likened
him to Uganda's mass-murdering Idi Amin. Nevertheless, Carter made
Young his point man on Africa. According to Martin Meredith, a former
southern Africa correspondent for the Sunday Times of London, "Young
was not, perhaps, the best choice the Americans could have made"
for negotiations in Rhodesia. "He had a reputation for being
recklessly outspoken on subjects about which he appeared to know
little, and Rhodesia was no exception." Time said some State
Department careerists thought of Young as an "unguided missile."
In September
1977, the Carter administration announced its "Anglo-American
plan," drawn up in conjunction with the Labour government of
Prime Minister James Callaghan. The plan called for British administration
of Rhodesia backed up by a U.N. peacekeeping force, a constitution
ensuring universal adult suffrage, and majority rule by 1978. Majority
rule was to be tempered, however, by the reservation of 20 out of
100 parliamentary seats for whites. The proposal also called for
the incorporation of ZANU and ZAPU guerrilla units into the new
country's army and, more important, the participation of the two
nationalist movements in the country's elections. Smith, along with
the moderate black leaders, opposed this plan because it would have
led to a military dominated by Mugabe and Nkomo's forces.
Instead, Smith
came up with what he and his popularly supported black allies termed
the "internal settlement." In March 1978, they formed
an executive council that would serve as a transitional government
until democratic elections were held the following year. This internal
settlement called for the promulgation of a new constitution establishing
majority rule, but maintaining 28 out of 100 seats in the new parliament
for whites. This was not a perfect proposal, but Muzorewa--no doubt
expressing the desires of the country's justly impatient black majority--declared
that it created "the machinery for dismantling the structure
and practices of colonialism and racism and of minority rule."
Muzorewa, Sithole, and Chirau understood the economic necessity
of keeping the white population engaged in Zimbabwe's future, and
hoped that an agreement acceptable to both black and white would
discredit the guerrilla groups and help put an end to the Bush war.
Eighty-five percent of the country's whites supported the agreement
in a January 1979 referendum: The illusion of perpetual white rule
was dead. Elections were scheduled for April 1979. Both Mugabe and
Nkomo--in spite of their commitment to violence and opposition to
democracy--were offered seats on the Executive Council along with
the other black leaders but, fearing this would hurt their chances
of ever gaining absolute control over the country, they refused.
It was not altogether
unreasonable to protect the interests of the white minority, as
the functioning of the Zimbabwean economy depended on the skills
of educated whites who, by the late 1970s, were fleeing the country
at the rate of 1,000 per month. To understand what sort of fate
might befall a Rhodesia conquered by Marxist rebels, one had only
to look to the former Portuguese colonies of Mozambique and Angola,
which, when overthrown in 1975 after the fall of the Caetano regime
a year before, witnessed the immediate mass emigration of Portuguese
citizens (about a quarter of a million from each country) and the
collapse of those nations' economies. In light of these disastrous
post-colonial developments, the desire to keep as many skilled whites
as possible within Rhodesia after the transition to a black government
was not just the selfish concern of the whites themselves; the presidents
of African states that depended on Rhodesia for trade understood
that white interests would have to be protected for an extended
period of time. This was not an unusual consideration; Kenya, Tanzania,
and Zambia, former British colonies all, reserved extra parliamentary
seats for whites for a transitional period. Alas, it did not stop
the three countries from turning into dictatorships.
The
1979 election
The Carter administration,
the Labour government in Britain, and the international left all
insisted that Mugabe and Nkomo be part of the negotiating process--on
its face a concession to terrorism. Presaging the edicts of Al Qaeda
in Iraq, both guerrilla leaders pledged violence against any black
Zimbabwean who dared take part in the April balloting. Nkomo called
for a "bloodbath." A year earlier he had ridiculed the
"all party nonsense" advocated by the moderate black leaders
and said, "We mean to get that country by force, and we shall
get it." Mugabe, not to be outdone, issued a public death list
of 50 individuals associated with the internal settlement, including
the three black leaders of the executive council. ZANU described
these individuals as "Zimbabwean black bourgeoisie, traitors,
fellow-travelers, and puppets of the Ian Smith regime, opportunistic
running-dogs and other capitalist vultures." Mugabe also expressed
his belief that "the multiparty system is a luxury" and
said that if Zimbabwean blacks did not like Marxism, "then
we will have to reeducate them." This was the same Mugabe whom
Young, in that 1978 interview with the Times of London, had called
"a very gentle man," adding, "I can't imagine Joshua
Nkomo, or Robert Mugabe, ever pulling the trigger on a gun to kill
anyone. I doubt that they ever have."
Nevertheless,
in April 1979, in a scene reminiscent of the recent Iraqi elections,
nearly 3 million blacks came out to vote under a state of martial
law and with armed guerrillas actively seeking to disrupt the balloting.
Although 100,000 soldiers protected the polling places, 10 civilians
were killed by Mugabe and Nkomo's forces. Even so, the election
was a resounding success and produced a clear verdict. An overwhelming
majority of voters chose Muzorewa to become the first black prime
minister of Zimbabwe Rhodesia, as the country was now called.
Sadly, this
democratic outcome was a chimera. Muzorewa--spurned by the West,
deemed illegitimate by the African dictatorships, and forced to
contend with Communist-armed insurgents--would hold power for a
mere matter of months. The betrayal of Muzorewa is one of the more
craven episodes in American foreign policy.
Liberal international
opinion condemned the election before it ever took place. Andrew
Young called the interim government "neofascist," and
the New York Times editorialized that the election would be a "moral
and diplomatic disaster." In March 1979, 185 individuals signed
a statement calling it a "fraud" and opined that "free
elections require . . . freedom for all political parties to campaign,"
presumably even parties committed to one-party rule and violence
if they do not win. Then, once the election took place, the left
discredited it as a charade. A cover story in the Nation by British
journalist David Caute, entitled "The Sham Election in Rhodesia,"
featured a cartoon with a smiling white man in safari outfit holding
a gun as sheep with black faces ("electoral livestock,"
in Caute's words) lined up to vote. Caute likened the new black
government to Vichy France.
The appearance
of a popularly elected, black-led, anti-Marxist government in Africa
confronted Western liberals with a challenge: Would they accept
this interim agreement, widely endorsed by the country's blacks,
as a step on the path to full majority rule, or would they reject
the democratic will of the Zimbabwean people in favor of guerrilla
groups that supported Soviet-style dictatorship? Caute at least
had the honesty to admit that "Mugabe, indeed, openly espouses
a one-party state and makes no secret of the fact that any election
won by ZANU would be Zimbabwe's last."
Bayard Rustin,
the black civil rights leader who had been the chief organizer of
the 1963 March on Washington and the national chairman of the Social
Democrats USA, observed the April election as part of a Freedom
House delegation. A founder of the Committee to Support South African
Resistance, Rustin was outraged at the response of those on the
left. "No election held in any country at any time within memory
has been more widely or vociferously scorned by international opinion
than the election conducted last April in Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe
Rhodesia," he wrote in Commentary. The Freedom House delegation,
whose members had previously monitored elections in 26 countries,
interviewed over 600 black voters and visited more than 60 polling
stations throughout the country. Rustin determined the elections
to be "remarkably free and fair." Even the Nation editorial
board conceded that the elections had "undeniably mobilized
a genuine outpouring of sentiment for peace among black Rhodesians."
The New York Times, like Mugabe and Nkomo, however, did not care
about the democratic means employed, only the end result. "The
real issue is not how the election was conducted, but what it was
about," the Times intoned, snidely referring to the black political
organizations participating in the elections as the "collaborating
parties."
"The contrast
between how the election was viewed by most Zimbabweans (the name
preferred by blacks) and how it was described by critics outside
the country is nothing less than extraordinary," Rustin wrote.
With the United States openly deferring to the wishes of ZANU, ZAPU,
and their enablers among the African tyrannies, Rustin said, "We
have found ourselves, until now, tacitly aligned with groups armed
by Moscow, hostile to America, antagonistic to democracy, and unpopular
within Zimbabwe Rhodesia itself." Rustin appropriately referred
to the Patriotic Front as a "paper political alliance"
that claimed not only a base of popular support it did not have,
but also, and more ominously, a natural right to everlasting power
it certainly did not merit. Rustin was hardly the only liberal supportive
of the interim government; it should be noted that accompanying
him on the Freedom House delegation was the former U.S. ambassador
to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, Al Lowenstein (the
founder of the 1968 Dump Johnson movement), who aggressively lobbied
Congress to support the nascent, democratic Zimbabwe Rhodesia.
After the election,
the Patriotic Front continued to wage war on the new multiracial
government, which proceeded to defend itself with an army and police
force that were, respectively, 85 percent and 75 percent black.
But the government also extended an olive branch to the guerrillas
in hopes of achieving a ceasefire and promised that any and all
guerrillas willing to put down their guns would have a "safe
return" to civilian life without fear of punishment. Would
the guerrilla groups maintain their campaign against Zimbabwe Rhodesia
now that a black prime minister had been elected? The government
got its answer in May. Four of Prime Minister Muzorewa's envoys
to the guerrillas were seized by Mugabe's forces, displayed before
200 tribesmen, and shot as an example of what would become of those
who negotiated with the new black government. Six weeks later, 39
representatives of Rev. Sithole were also murdered.
The question
remained of how the United States would relate to the new democratically
elected black government. In 1978, Congress had passed the Case-Javits
Amendment, which compelled the president to lift the sanctions on
Rhodesia (in place since a 1966 U.N. Security Council resolution)
if the regime held free and fair elections and showed a good-faith
effort to negotiate with guerrilla leaders. Undoubtedly, the April
1979 election and the interim government's invitation to the Patriotic
Front to participate met these conditions. Appropriately, two weeks
after the election, the Senate passed a nonbinding resolution 75-19
calling on the Carter administration to lift sanctions. Unable to
challenge the validity of the Zimbabwe Rhodesia government on the
merits as stipulated by Congress, Carter persuaded congressional
allies to pass a new bill that would allow him to maintain sanctions
in order to protect America's national interests in Africa, which
he believed would be threatened if the United States recognized
a government not favored by the thugs and tyrants on the continent.
In July, Muzorewa
came to the United States determined to "remove the blindness"
of the Carter administration. He said that there were "some
people who are sick in the head in the international world"
for maintaining sanctions against a country that had transitioned
peacefully from white power to majority rule. Muzorewa was far too
sanguine about his ability to persuade Jimmy Carter and Andrew Young;
their blindness was incurable. In October, all four members of the
Zimbabwe Rhodesia executive council traveled to the United States
to plead for recognition, and Carter refused to meet with them.
Disappointed by the West's rebuff, Muzorewa noted that while Zimbabweans
"are prepared to forget the past and work together with our
white brethren, . . . some people in Britain, America, Africa, and
other parts of the world appear unwilling to allow us to do so."
Of the election
that had catapulted Muzorewa to power, Martin Meredith wrote, "However
much disappointment there was with a constitution which entrenched
white privilege, the opportunity to vote for a black leader who
promised peace was worth having." But as Muzorewa immediately
discovered, to the Carter administration, no government without
Robert Mugabe in charge was worth having.
The
shame of 1980
Ultimately,
what guided the thinking of the British and the Americans was the
fear that siding with Muzorewa and other black moderates over Mugabe
would alienate black African states and thus imperil Western diplomatic
objectives in sub-Saharan Africa. Because of a narrow Cold War calculus
insistent on the notion that black Africa be prevented from turning
pro-Soviet (at least those states that were not already in the Soviet
camp) and a postcolonial guilt that awarded moral superiority to
the first generation of African leaders (many of whom were no better,
and in some cases worse, than their colonial oppressors), the pronouncements
and interests of the African states weighed far too heavily in the
Carter administration's foreign policy.
But the decision
to oppose the internal settlement was faulty for two reasons. First,
if the United States and Britain had supported the pact, there is
no telling what further diplomatic pressure they might have brought
to bear on Smith to wrangle more concessions for the country's black
majority. Western support for the internal settlement would have
elevated Muzorewa's standing as a legitimate black leader and thus
further deprived the guerrilla groups of the ideological oxygen
needed to sustain their war. And with Western backing, Muzorewa
would have been better equipped to convince his African neighbors
to end their support for Mugabe and Nkomo. In 1978, Chester Crocker
(who would later serve as Reagan's assistant secretary of state
for African affairs) wrote in the pages of the New Republic that,
"given the weak, war-torn economies and minimal military strength
of its neighboring states, a black Zimbabwe government which issued
from the internal talks would have a good opportunity to establish
itself." Sadly, because of misguided Western policy, that black
government never had a fighting chance.
Second, the
Carter administration's preening before black African countries
was morally bankrupt. Few of the nations that made up the pro-Patriotic
Front Organization of African Unity showed much concern for democracy;
it was quite rich to see presidents Julius Nyerere of Tanzania and
Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, both of whom had instituted one-party
rule soon after independence, giving instructions on democracy to
America and Britain. The military dictatorship of Nigeria, threatening
to cut off oil to the United States, had the audacity to term one
of the rare African democracies "the outcast puppet regime
of Bishop Abel Muzorewa." The one-party, pro-Soviet dictatorship
of Mozambique (host to Mugabe) offered similar invective. Rustin
aptly wrote that "if the presidents of Zambia, Mozambique,
Tanzania, and Angola have their way, majority rule will take a form
more or less similar to what exists in their own countries; which
is to say that it will be a dictatorship by a small black elite
over a destitute black population." In response to Carter's
refusal to accept the legitimacy of the April 1979 election, the
Washington Post editorialized that the administration was "ignoring
fairness and impartiality in order to court those black African
states, mostly petty dictatorships or paper democracies."
And so the guerrilla
war against Zimbabwe Rhodesia went on unabated. His country laboring
under continuing sanctions, Muzorewa could do little to reassure
the black population that he had the ability to bring the peace
he had promised. Demoralized by the rejection of Great Britain,
the United States, and their African neighbors, the leaders of Zimbabwe
Rhodesia agreed in late 1979 to a new set of negotiations to be
held at Lancaster House in London, in which the Patriotic Front
would participate. The agreement that emerged was essentially the
same as the internal settlement, except that it reduced the number
of white parliamentary seats from 28 to 20, established a land reform
policy of "willing buyer, willing seller" funded by the
British and Americans, and, most fatefully, allowed ZANU and ZAPU
to participate in a new election, to be held in February 1980.
If the international
community had rejected the 1979 election, it should have been utterly
disgusted with the one held less than a year later. Mugabe insisted
that the two wings of the Patriotic Front run separately; he knew
that with 75 percent of the country's blacks belonging to his Shona
tribe, he would be catapulted into power and could shunt Nkomo (a
member of the Ndebele tribe) to the sidelines. Lord Christopher
Soames, charged by the British with overseeing the election, found,
according to Meredith, that "the scale of intimidation in eastern
Rhodesia [bordering Mozambique, which had sheltered Mugabe's ZANU
guerrillas] was massive. . . . The mere presence of Mugabe's guerrillas
in the villages was enough to deter the local population from showing
support for any party other than ZANU." ZANU apparatchiks once
again compiled "death lists," making clear to black servants
and local tribesmen that they would pay the consequences for not
supporting Mugabe.
In the weeks
leading up to the February election, the British Combined Operations
Headquarters was informed of at least one political murder every
day. Ultimately, Soames's election observers concluded that in five
of Rhodesia's eight electoral provinces, "conditions for a
free election no longer existed." Both Muzorewa and Nkomo demanded
that Mugabe not be allowed to participate in the elections, but,
fearing that any rebuke to Mugabe would restart the guerrilla war,
the British and American governments insisted on his participation.
In an early indication of what sort of ruler he would become, Mugabe
demanded that a Kalashnikov rifle be the ZANU election symbol. At
least the interim British administration rejected this ominous request.
To top matters
off, Mugabe announced in advance that he would abide by the elections
only if he won. According to Martin Meredith, throughout the Lancaster
House negotiations, Mugabe's "real fear, as it had been all
along, was that a negotiated settlement threatened his aim of achieving
revolutionary change in Rhodesia." Mugabe finally agreed to
the British terms only because the African leaders could no longer
put up with the consequences of the Bush war (during the conference,
Smith's army bombed crucial railways in Zambia and Mozambique) and
because Nkomo went along with the settlement, isolating ZANU. Everything
in Mugabe's history indicates that if he had lost the 1980 election,
he would have reverted to war. For Rhodesia's beleaguered blacks--who
had suffered more than anyone else not only from the oppressive
counterinsurgency operations of the white minority government but
also from the unforgiving tactics of the guerrillas--the threat
of a worsening, protracted civil war all but assured victory for
Mugabe.
The election
result was announced on March 4, 1980.Mugabe took 64 percent of
the vote, with over 90 percent of eligible blacks voting. No doubt
the higher participation in 1980 had to do with the fact that, in
contrast with 1979, guerrillas did not violently suppress turnout.
Nevertheless, British election commissioner Sir John Boynton reported
that death threats, the murder of candidates and their supporters,
property destruction, violent intimidation, and, most portentously,
the threat of continued war all occurred with disturbing frequency
in the two-month campaign. Mugabe's forces were responsible for
70 percent of ceasefire violations.
And lest anyone
doubt that Mugabe was the favorite of the front-line states that
had aided him in his war against Muzorewa, he left the country during
the balloting for meetings with the leaders of Mozambique and Tanzania,
a presumptuous act for a would-be president. In the midst of the
election, Mugabe announced he would "seek the aid of our friends
in Africa if needs be." Freedom House found that "the
open or implicit threat by the formerly externally based parties
[ZANU and ZAPU] that they would renew the insurgency should they
not win represented an important indirect form of intimidation"
and that "threats by black and white African states of nonrecognition
or intervention in the event of particular electoral outcomes were
an external form of intimidation."
The Carter administration
had declared that though the 1979 election of Muzorewa had been
conducted in a "reasonably fair way," it did not merit
the United States' support because Mugabe was not involved. The
1980 election, on the other hand, which Mugabe won largely by threatening
violence, the Carter administration declared to be "free and
fair," leading to the lifting of sanctions. Mugabe, it seems,
would have liked to return the favor. In 1980, mere months before
Carter would resoundingly lose his reelection bid to Ronald Reagan,
Zimbabwe's new prime minister told African-American leaders at a
White House ceremony that if Carter "were running in our territory,
he would be assured of victory."
The defeat of
Muzorewa and the triumph of Mugabe cast the West's Rhodesia policy
in stark relief: If Muzorewa had chosen Marxist revolution over
diplomacy and had endeared himself to African dictators, he would
have won Western support. Critics of Muzorewa alleged that his inability
to stop the civil war during his brief tenure as prime minister
demonstrated ineffectual leadership. In fact, it reflected the determination
of Mugabe and Nkomo to keep fighting until they secured power for
themselves. The United States and Great Britain gave Mugabe and
Nkomo legitimacy by indulging the demands of the African dictators.
Muzorewa warned
what would happen if Mugabe won: "Any talk of democracy, freedom,
and independence will be turned into an impossible dream. . . .
This country will find itself wallowing in the dust of poverty,
misery, and starvation." To Mugabe's Western enablers, particularly
Andrew Young, this must have seemed like the jealous sniping of
a man who had been turned out of office. Yet from the vantage point
of 2007, Muzorewa's prescience is plain for all to see.
Tyranny
sets in
The Carter administration's
victory in Rhodesia was a hollow one. It is true that not every
fearsome forecast was immediately borne out: Mugabe did not turn
out to be the Soviet or Chinese agent many thought him, and the
conflagration raging in Angola did not spread into Zimbabwe. But
fatal damage was done. As early as August 1981, just over a year
after taking power, Mugabe called for a referendum on whether Zimbabwe
should be a one-party state. In 1982 he proclaimed, "ZANU-PF
will rule forever," just as he had promised throughout the
Bush war. And writing in the New Republic in early 1983, Xan Smiley,
an editorial writer for the London Times, reported that Mugabe's
"rhetoric of egalitarianism and the demands of traditional
authoritarianism mean that individuals are going to get crushed."
Not just individuals, but whole groups of people would be crushed.
From 1983 until 1987, Mugabe unleashed his North Korean-trained
Fifth Brigade troops against supposed Ndebele plotters in the Matabeleland
massacres, slaughtering an estimated 25,000 people.
The country's
black leaders who dared to oppose Mugabe received the treatment
inevitably meted out by a paranoid tyrant. In 1983 Mugabe jailed
Muzorewa for 10 months, accusing him of plotting with South Africa
and Israel to overthrow the regime. He now lives quietly in Zimbabwe,
ignored by the world that spurned him nearly 30 years ago. The same
year Nkomo, Mugabe's erstwhile ally, fled the country fearing assassination.
Mugabe persuaded his old comrade to return and in 1987 forced him
to agree to a virtual one-party state, in which ZANU absorbed ZAPU
and took 147 out of 150 seats in parliament. Nkomo spent the next
12 years of his life in obscurity. Also in 1987, rightly fearing
for his safety, Sithole sought political asylum in the United States.
He later returned to Zimbabwe and was elected to parliament. But
in 1997, Sithole was convicted of attempting to assassinate Mugabe
and was barred from returning to office. Other political opponents
either fell into line or have been imprisoned or killed.
For some years,
Mugabe kept his promise to leave the whites alone. But in 2000 he
instigated the forcible seizure of private farmland, which has brought
Zimbabwe economic collapse, famine, and a massive refugee crisis.
One-third of the country's population is estimated to have fled
in the past seven years. The dictator, now 83, having brought his
country to its knees, is hanging on only by the support of his armed
forces and his fellow African leaders, who share a residual admiration
for this hero of African "liberation."
Carter is unrepentant
about his administration's support for Mugabe. At a Carter Center
event in Boston on June 8, he said that he, Young, and Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance had "spent more time on Rhodesia than
on the Middle East." Carter admitted that "we supported
two revolutionaries in Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo."
He adopts the "good leader gone bad" hindsight of Mugabe's
early backers, stating that "at first [Mugabe] was a very enlightened
president." While conceding that Mugabe is now "oppressive,"
Carter stressed that this murderer of tens of thousands "needs
to be treated with respect and assured that if he does deal with
those issues [democratization and human rights], he won't be punished
or prosecuted for his crimes." Though it has supervised elections
in over 60 countries, the 25-year-old Carter Center has no projects
in Zimbabwe, nor has Carter (who demonstrates no compunction about
lecturing others) attempted to atone for the ruin that his policies
as president wreaked.
History will
not look kindly on those in the West who insisted on bringing the
avowed Marxist Mugabe into the government. In particular, the Jimmy
Carter foreign policy--feckless in the Iranian hostage crisis, irresolute
in the face of mounting Soviet ambitions, and noted in the post-White
House years for dalliances with dictators the world over--bears
some responsibility for the fate of a small African country with
scant connection to American national interests. In response to
Carter's comment last month that the Bush administration's foreign
policy was the "worst in history," critics immediately
cited those well-publicized failures. But the betrayal of Bishop
Muzorewa and of all Zimbabweans, black and white, who warned what
sort of leader Robert Mugabe would be deserves just as prominent
a place among the outrages of the Carter years.
James Kirchick
is assistant to the editor-in-chief of the New Republic. He reported
from Zimbabwe and South Africa last year.
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