| |
Back to Index
How
to be a mad dictator
David Aaronovitch, The Times (UK)
December 11, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/david_aaronovitch/article3031178.ece
Gordon Brown was right
not to go to Lisbon at the weekend, but even so, there was something
marvellous about seeing Robert Mugabe being Merkelled in the flesh
by the German Chancellor. There, impassive, he was forced to sit
while Frau Angela told him, in front of 70 African and European
leaders, what a shower he was. Whether it improves anything or not,
is another matter, but it felt good.
Four weeks earlier there
had been a rather similar moment during the Ibero-American summit
in Chile. Hugo Chávez, the populist President of Venezuela,
had been laying about him with his characteristic lack of restraint.
José Aznar, the former Prime Minister of Spain, was, according
to President Chávez, a fascist, and, he added, "fascists
are not human. A snake is more human". When the current Spanish
PM - an opponent of Mr Aznar's - objected to this abuse, Chávez
continued to shout. It was at this point that the King of Spain,
Juan Carlos, leant forward and told Chávez to shut his big,
fat, sloppy gob. My Spanish is poor, but it was something like that.
JC's admonition has become a popular ringtone around the world.
This symmetry appealed
to me because, though Chávez's Venezuela is not yet anything
like Mugabe's Zimbabwe, I cannot help thinking that Mugabe is Chávez's
possible future, and that the 83-year-old former liberation fighter
is the former general's Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come.
Mugabe, like Chávez,
took power after elections that were widely agreed to have been
fairly conducted. Over time his governing philosophy came to consist
of an economic nationalism underpinning a state socialist system,
mobilised by exploiting resentment towards a privileged minority
(the whites), treacherous elites (journalists) and interfering foreign
powers (Britain).
To varying degrees in
Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, the same national-Left populism
is today in power. Industries are nationalised, oligarchies are
excoriated, journalists are traitors and behind every reversal and
problem is the demonic power of the Great Gringo in the White House.
Powers are sought by the populist presidents, which, while they
are argued to enhance the power of the people, unarguably enhance
the power of the president.
The week before last,
by a small margin, the people of Venezuela refused Chávez
the extension to his powers that he had sought. Encouragingly, Chávez
seemed to concede with good grace. Impeccable grace, actually, saying:
"I recognise the decision a people have made." A week
later and more ominously the President was describing the people's
decision as "a shitty victory, and our - call it, defeat -
is one of courage, of valour, of dignity," adding: "We
haven't moved a millimetre and we won't." Several times now
he has seemed to suggest that the proposals, in some form, will
return. "This Bolivarian Republic will keep getting stronger,"
he predicted.
Incidentally it is almost
always bad news when the word "Republic" is preceded
by an adjective. Ask those who have dwelt in Democratic, People's
or Islamic Republics.
Before the Venezuelan
vote there had been a convocation of British Signaturistas lining
up behind Citizen Chávez. Exuding a reflexive sigh of admiration
for the Bolivarian Revolution were the inevitable Pinters and Loaches,
as well as Jon Cruddas, MP, who ought to know better, and Ken Livingstone,
who never does. Anticipating a "Si!" vote, however,
and demanding that the international community live with it, these
progressives now contemplate the possibility that its is Chávez
who cannot live with the result.
Of course, this may turn
out to be wrong, but Mugabe suggests the trajectory: start with
foreign sequestration, use the proceeds for internal bribery, watch
the economy collapse and blame first the outsider and then the traitor.
Finally, watch your people starve.
And Mugabe also suggests
the trajectory of the apologists. There's a new dawn, shiny new
clinics, optimism in each eye, power to the people and expropriate
the expropriators. And if there are problems, such as a shortage
of powdered milk in Caracas, then, according to Richard Gott, of
The Guardian: "No one knows for certain if this is the result
of opposition manoeuvre and malice, or of government incompetence."
Seventy years on and the class traitors are still putting glass
in the worker's butter. Possibly.
But, as Julia Buxton,
of Bradford University, reminds us, we must not judge Bolivarian
democracy by our own lights. According to her there is a difference
between "popular perceptions of democracy on the ground in
Venezuela, and 'elite' perceptions, articulated by the media
and US 'democracy-promotion' groups". "Venezuela,"
she explains, "cannot be understood through the lens of liberal
democracy," because democracy itself cannot be "judged
through reference to the procedural mechanics of liberal democracy."
The implication here is the superior development of some other kind
of democracy.
So Professor Buxton might
have added that: "It is the people themselves, who are incessantly
called upon to participate personally in the decisions, not merely
by expressing opinions about them in innumerable popular meetings;
not merely by voting for or against their exponents at recurring
elections; but actually by individually sharing in their operation."
In fact this was Sidney and Beatrice Webb on the Russia of 1936,
headed by a Stalin who, in a familiar inversion, the Webbs regarded
as being more collegiate than the British Prime Minister. "A
shrewd and definitely skilful manger," as they described him.
Or was that Gott on Chávez?
The other day I was asked
if, given what had happened since, it had been wrong to support
the Lancaster House agreement that led to majority rule in Zimbabwe.
The problem was, of course, that it came too late. Mugabe was partly
made possible by the conditions that created him: racism, colonialism
and tribalism. So in South America the conditions for Latin Mugabeism
were partly created by rampant exploitation, racism and the support
given by the US to "our bastards".
The alternative to Mugabeism
will not be a return to the status quo ante, but - as in Chile -
the painful and compromising development of good old, boring old,
liberal social democracy. You know, with votes and MPs and stuff.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|