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Sharp
attack unwarranted
Stephen Zunes
June 27, 2008
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5327
Gene Sharp, an 80-year-old
scholar of strategic nonviolent action and veteran of radical pacifist
causes, is under attack by a number of foreign governments that
claim that he and his small research institute are key players in
a Bush administration plot against them.
Though there is no truth
to these charges, several leftist web sites and publications have
been repeating such claims as fact. This raises disturbing questions
regarding the ability of progressives challenging Bush foreign policy
to distinguish between the very real manifestations of U.S. imperialism
and conspiratorial fantasies.
Gene Sharp's personal
history demonstrates the bizarre nature of these charges. He spent
two years in prison for draft resistance against the Korean War,
was arrested in the early civil rights sit- ins, was an editor of
the radical pacifist journal Peace News, and was the personal assistant
to the leftist labor organizer A.J. Muste. He named his institute
after Albert Einstein, who is not only remembered as the greatest
scientist of the 20th century but was also a well-known socialist
and pacifist.
Sharp founded the Albert
Einstein Institution in 1983, dedicated to advancing the study and
utilization of nonviolent conflict in defense of freedom, justice,
and democracy. Long considered the foremost authority in his field,
Sharp has inspired generations of progressive peace, labor, feminist,
environmental, and social justice activists in the United States
and around the world. In the past few decades, as nonviolent pro-democracy
movements have played the decisive role in ending authoritarian
rule in such countries as the Philippines, Chile, Madagascar, Poland,
Mongolia, Bolivia and Serbia, interest among peace and justice activists
has grown in his research and the work of other scholars studying
strategic nonviolent action.
Fabricated
allegations
Unfortunately,
however, as a result of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the Bush administration's
open advocacy for "regime change," any American group
or individual who provides educational resources on strategic nonviolence
to civil society organizations or human rights activists in foreign
countries has suddenly become suspect of being an agent of U.S.
imperialism - even Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution.
For example, in February
Iranian government television informed viewers that Gene Sharp was
"one of the CIA agents in charge of America's infiltration
into other countries." It included a computer-animated sequence
of him and John McCain in a White House conference room plotting
the overthrow of the Iranian regime. In reality, Sharp has never
worked with the CIA, has never met Senator McCain, and has never
even been to the White House. Government spokespeople and supporters
of autocratic regimes in Burma, Zimbabwe, and Belarus have also
blamed Sharp for being behind dissident movements in their countries
as well.
Ironically, some on the
left have picked up and expanded on these charges. For example,
in an article about the Bush administration promoting "soft
coups" against foreign governments it doesn't like, Jonathan
Mowat claims that "The main handler of these coups on the 'street
side' has been the Albert Einstein Institution," which he says
is funded by Hungarian-American financier George Soros. Venezuelan-American
attorney Eva Golinger, meanwhile, claimed that "Peter Ackerman,
a multimillionaire banker had sponsored 'regime changes' in Serbia,
Ukraine, and Georgia through the Albert Einstein Institute."
Tony Logan insists that AEI "is a U.S. government run operation
designed to link Gandhian methods of nonviolent protest to Pentagon
and US State Department efforts to overthrow foreign governments."
In a similar vein, Counterpunch readers were recently informed that
the Albert Einstein Institution plays "a central role in a
new generation of warfare, one which has incorporated the heroic
examples of past nonviolent resistance into a strategy of obfuscation
and misdirection that does the work of empire."
Absolutely none of these
claims is true. Yet such articles have been widely circulated on
progressive websites and list serves. Such false allegations have
even ended up as part of entries on the Albert Einstein Institution
in SourceWatch, Wikipedia, and other reference web sites.
The international press
has occasionally echoed some of these bogus claims as well. For
example, a commentary published in the Asia Times last fall accused
Sharp of being the "concert-master" for the Saffron Revolution
in Burma, claiming that the Albert Einstein Institution is funded
by an arm of the U.S. government "to foster U.S.-friendly regime
change in key spots around the world" and that its staff includes
"known CIA operatives." Though these charges were utterly
false, the article was then widely circulated on a number of progressive
list serves, including such academic networks as the Peace and Justice
Studies Association.
Implicit in such charges
is that Burmese monks and other pro- democracy activists in that
country are unable to initiate such actions themselves and their
decision to take to the streets last fall in mass protests against
their country's repressive military junta came about because an
octogenarian academic in Boston had somehow put them up to it. One
Burmese human rights activist, referring to his country's centuries-old
tradition of popular resistance, noted how the very idea of an outsider
having to orchestrate the Burmese people to engage in a nonviolent
action campaign is like "teaching grandma to peel onions."
(The Asia Times article also tried to connect Sharp to the 1989
Tiananmen Square protests in China and another article from the
Straits Times in Singapore even places Sharp and AEI behind the
recent uprising in Tibet.)
This racist attitude
that the peoples of non-Western societies are incapable of deciding
on their own to resist illegitimate authority without some Western
scholar telling them to do so has been most dramatically highlighted
by French Marxist Thierry Meyssan. In his article "The Albert
Einstein Institution: non-violence according to the CIA," he
insists that Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution were personally
responsible for the 1991 Lithuanian independence struggle against
the Soviet Union; the 2000 student-led pro- democracy movement that
ousted Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia; the 2003 Rose Revolution that
forced out Georgian leader Eduard Shevardnadze; and, the 2004 Orange
Revolution that forced the revote on the rigged national election
in Ukraine. He also credits
(or, more accurately, blames) Gene Sharp for personally playing
a key role in uniting the Tibetan opposition under the Dalai Lama,
as well as forming the Burmese Democratic Alliance, the Taiwanese
Progressive Democratic Party, and a dissident wing of the Palestine
Liberation Organization that Sharp supposedly trained secretly in
the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv.
The failure of people
power movements to succeed in some other cases was not, according
to Meyssan, due to weaknesses within the movement or strengths in
the state apparatus. Says Meyssan, "Gene Sharp failed in Belarus
and Zimbabwe for he could not recruit and train in the proper time
the necessary amount of demonstrators."
Despite the absurdity
of these claims and the attribution of seemingly superhuman capabilities
to this mild-mannered intellectual, Meyssan's article has been repeatedly
cited on progressive web sites and list serves, feeding the arrogance
of Western leftists who deny the capability of Asians, Africans,
Latin Americans, and Eastern Europeans to organize mass actions
themselves.
The
real story
The
office of the Albert Einstein Institution - which supposedly plays
such a "central role" in American imperialism -is actually
a tiny, cluttered space in the downstairs of Gene Sharp's home,
located in a small row house in a working class neighborhood in
East Boston. The staff consists of just two employees, Sharp and
a young administrator.
Rather than receiving
lucrative financial support from the U.S. government or wealthy
financiers, the Albert Einstein Institution is almost exclusively
funded by individual small donors and foundation grants. It operates
on a budget of less than $160,000 annually.
Also contrary to the
slew of recent charges posted on the Internet, the Albert Einstein
Institution has never funded activist groups to subvert foreign
governments, nor would it have had the financial means to do so.
Furthermore, AEI does not initiate contact with any individual or
organizations; those interested in the group's educational materials
come to them first.
Nor have these critics
ever presented any evidence that Sharp or the Albert Einstein Institution
has ever been requested, encouraged, advised, or received suggestions
by any branch of the US government to do or not do any research,
analysis, policy studies, or educational activity, much less engage
in active subversion of foreign governments. And, given the lack
of respect the U.S. government has traditionally had for nonviolence
or for the power of popular movements to create change, it is not
surprising that these critics haven't found any.
The longstanding policy
of the Albert Einstein Institution, given its limited funding and
the reality of living in an imperfect world, is to be open to accepting
funds from organizations that have received some funding from government
sources "as long as there is no dictation or control of the
purpose of our work, individual projects, or of the dissemination
of the gained knowledge." Well prior to the Bush administration
coming to office, AEI received a couple of small grants from the
congressionally funded National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and
the International Republican Institute (IRI) to translate some of
Gene Sharp's theoretical writings. Nearly forty years ago (and fifteen
years prior to AEI's founding), Sharp received partial research
funding for his doctoral dissertation from Harvard Professor Thomas
Schelling, who had received support from the Advanced Research Projects
Agency of the US Department of Defense to fund doctoral students.
Though these
constitute the only financial support Gene Sharp or the Albert Einstein
Institution has ever received, even indirectly, from government
sources, critics have jumped on these tenuous links to allege that
AEI is "funded by the U.S. government."
Progressive connections
A
look at the five members of the Albert Einstein Institution's board
shows that none of them is a supporter or apologist for U.S. imperialism.
In addition to Sharp himself, the board consists of: human rights
lawyer Elizabeth Defeis; disability rights and environmental activist
Cornelia Sargent; senior deputy executive director of Amnesty International
USA Curt Goering; and, veteran civil rights and anti-war activist
Mary King, author of a recent highly acclaimed book that gives a
sympathetic portrayal of the first - and largely nonviolent - Palestinian
Intifada.
During the 1980s, Gene
Sharp's staff included radical sociologist Bob Irwin and Greg Bates,
who went on to become the co-founder and publisher of the progressive
Common Courage Press.
Some years ago, when
the institute had a larger budget, one of their principal activities
was to support research projects in strategic nonviolent action.
Recipients included such left-leaning scholars and activists as
Palestinian feminist Souad Dajani, Rutgers sociologist Kurt Schock,
Israeli human rights activist Edy Kaufman, Kent State Peace Studies
professor Patrick Coy, Nigerian human rights activist Uche Ewelukwa,
and Paul Routledge of the University of Glasgow, all of whom have
been outspoken critics of U.S. foreign policy.
For decades, the work
of Gene Sharp has influenced such radical U.S. groups as Movement
for a New Society, the Clamshell Alliance, the Abalone Alliance,
Training for Change and other activist organizations that have promoted
nonviolent direct action as a key component of their activism.
Sharp and AEI have also
worked closely in recent years with pro- democracy activists battling
U.S.-backed dictatorships in such countries as Egypt and Equatorial
Guinea as well as with Palestinians resisting the U.S.-backed Israeli
occupation, hardly "the work of empire" designed "to
foster US-friendly regime change" as critics claim.
The
case of Venezuela
As
part of an effort to challenge the longstanding stereotype of nonviolent
action being the exclusive province of radical pacifists, Dr. Sharp
and the Albert Einstein Institution have taken a "transpartisan"
position that cuts across political boundaries and conceptions and
makes their educational resources available to essentially anyone.
Not surprisingly, a small
minority of those who have taken advantage of such resources have
been those whose commitment to justice and equality is questionable,
including some members of Venezuelan opposition groups.
This ideological indifference
on the part of Sharp and his institution has been troubling for
many of us on the left, but it certainly does not constitute evidence
that they are part of a U.S.- funded conspiracy to overthrow foreign
governments around the world to advance U.S. imperialism and capitalist
hegemony. Indeed, their consulting policy explicitly prohibits them
from taking part in any political action, participating in strategic
decision-making with any group, or taking sides in any conflict.
None of the institute's critics has been able to provide evidence
of a single violation of this policy.
Nevertheless, in her
book Bush vs. Chavez: Washington's War on Venezuela, author Eva
Golinger falsely claims that the Albert Einstein Institution has
developed a plan to overthrow that country's democratically elected
government through training right- wing paramilitaries to use "widespread
civil disobedience and violence throughout the nation" in order
to "provoke repressive reactions by the state that would then
justify crises of human right violations and lack of constitutional
order." Similarly, in a recent article, Golinger has gone so
far as to claim that Gene Sharp has written "a big destabilization
plan aiming to overthrow Chavez government and to pave the way for
an international intervention" including sabotage and street
violence. Neither Golinger nor anyone else has been able to produce
a copy of this supposed plan, instead simply citing Sharp's book
The Politics of Nonviolent Action, written over 35 years ago, in
which he outlines close to 200 exclusively nonviolent tactics that
have been used historically, but includes no destabilization plan
aimed at Venezuela or any other country.
In addition, Meyssan,
in an article posted in Venezuela Analysis, insisted that "Gene
Sharp and his team led the leaders of [the opposition group] Súmate
during the demonstrations of August 2004." In reality, neither
Sharp nor anybody else affiliated with the Albert Einstein Institution
even took part in - much less led - those demonstrations. Nor were
any of them anywhere near Venezuela during that period. Nor were
any of them in contact with the leaders of that demonstration.
In another article, recently
posted on the Counterpunch web site, George Cicariello-Miller falsely
accuses Sharp of having links with right-wing assassins and terrorists
and offering training "toward the formulation of what was called
'Operation Guarimba,' a series of often-violent street blockades
that resulted in several deaths." Cicariello-Miller's only
evidence of Sharp's alleged role in masterminding this operation
was that a right-wing Venezuelan opposition leader had once met
with Sharp in Boston and that a photo of a stylized clinched fist
found in some AEI literature (taken from a student-led protest movement
in Serbia eight years ago) matched those on some signs carried by
anti-Chavez protesters in Venezuela.
It appears that
no one who has written any of these articles or who has made such
claims has ever actually attended any of the lectures, workshops,
or informal meetings by Gene Sharp or others affiliated with the
Albert Einstein Institution or has even bothered to interview anyone
who has. If they had done so, they would quickly find that these
presentations tend to be rather dry lectures which focus on the
nature of power, the dynamics of nonviolent struggle, and examples
of tactics used in nonviolent resistance campaigns historically.
They do not instruct anybody or give specific advice about what
to do in their particular situation other than to encourage activists
to avoid all forms of violence.
Finally,
even if one were to assume that the Albert Einstein Institution's
underfunded two-person outfit was indeed closely involved in training
the Venezuelan opposition in tactics of nonviolent resistance, Chavez
would have little to worry about. No government that had the support
of the majority of its people has ever been overthrown through a
nonviolent civil resistance movement. Every government deposed through
a primarily nonviolent struggle - such as in the Philippines, Chile,
Bolivia, Madagascar, Nepal, Czechoslovakia, Indonesia, Serbia, Mali,
Ukraine, and elsewhere - had already lost popular support. This
is not the case with Venezuela. While Chavez' progressive economic
policies have angered the old elites, he still maintains the support
of the majority of the population, particularly when compared to
the alternative of returning to the old elite-dominated political
system.
Unfortunately,
Chavez himself was apparently convinced by these conspiracy theorists
that Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution really were
part of a CIA-backed conspiracy against him, claiming last June
that "they are the ideologues of the soft coup and it seems
like they're here [in Venezuela.] They are laying out the slow fuse
... they'll continue laying it out [with] marches, events, trying
to create an explosion." In reality, no one affiliated with
AEI was in Venezuela nor were they organizing marches, events, or
any other activity, much less trying to create an "explosion."
In response, Sharp wrote a letter to President Chavez explaining
the inaccuracy of the Venezuelan leader's charges against him and
expressing his concern that "for those persons who are familiar
with my life and work and that of the Albert Einstein Institution,
these inaccuracies, unless corrected, will cast doubts on your credibility."
He also offered Chavez a copy of his book The Anti- Coup, which
includes concrete steps on how a threatened government can mobilize
the population to prevent a successful coup d'etat, hardly the kind
of offer made by someone conspiring with the CIA to overthrow him.
With the U.S.
corporate media and members of Congress refusing to challenge the
very real efforts by the Bush administration to subvert and undermine
Chavez's government, the credibility of those of us attempting to
expose such genuine imperialistic intrigues are being compromised
by these bizarre conspiracy theories involving Gene Sharp, the Albert
Einstein Institution, and related individuals and NGOs. Golinger's
books and articles, for example, bring to light some very real and
very dangerous efforts by the U.S. government and U.S.-funded agencies.
It is hard for many people to take her real accusations seriously,
however, in the face of her simultaneously putting forward such
blatant falsehoods about Gene Sharp and his institute.
Why
such bizarre attacks?
There
is a long, sordid history of covert U.S. support for foreign political
parties, military cliques, and individual leaders, as well as related
activities that have resulted in the overthrow of elected governments.
And there are the very real ongoing efforts by such U.S. government-funded
entities as the NED and IRI which, in the name of "democracy
promotion," provide financial and logistical support for groups
working against governments the United States opposes. Given these
very real manifestations of U.S. imperialism, why have some people
insisted on going after an aging scholar whose worst crime may be
that he is not being discriminating enough regarding with whom he
shares his research?
One reason is that some
critics of Sharp subscribe to the same realpolitik myth that sees
local struggles and mass movements as simply manifestations of great
power politics, just as the right once tried to portray the popular
leftist uprisings in Central America and elsewhere simply as creations
of the Soviet Union. Another factor is that many of the originators
of the conspiracy theories regarding Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein
Institution are Marxist-Leninists who have traditionally downplayed
the power of nonviolence and insisted that meaningful political
change can only come about through manipulation by powerful external
actors or privileged elites.
This is reinforced by
the fact that many supporters of U.S. imperialism - particularly
the neo-conservatives - share this vanguard mentality with Marxist-Leninists.
As a result, the right has given the United States unjustifiable
credit for many of the dramatic transitions from dictatorships to
democracies which have taken place around the world in recent decades.
This, in turn, has led some on the left to see such ahistorical
polemics as "proof" of the central U.S. role because the
imperialists are "admitting it."
The attempts to discredit
Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution - as well as similar
charges against the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict
(ICNC) and the Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies
(CANVAS) - appear to be part of an effort by both the right and
the far left to delegitimize the power of individuals to make change
and to portray the United States - for good or for ill - as the
only power that can make a difference in the world. (For a detailed
analysis of the relationship between U.S. foreign policy and popular
democratic movements, see my article on the United States, nonviolent
action and pro-democracy struggles.)
It is therefore
troubling that so many progressive sources of information have transmitted
such falsehoods so widely and that so many people have come to believe
them, particularly given the transparent lack of any solid evidence
to back their accusations. The minority of these articles that actually
have citations, for example, simply quote long-discredited sources
such as Meyssan and Golinger. In a mirror-image of the right-wing's
blind acceptance of false stories about Barack Obama's embrace of
militant Islam, Michelle Obama's anti-white rhetoric, and Nancy
Pelosi's punitive tax plan against retirees, some on the left all
too easily believe what they read on the Internet. The widespread
acceptance of these false charges against Gene Sharp and others
raises concerns as to how many other fabricated pseudo-conspiracies
are out there that distract progressive activists from challenging
all-too-real abuses by the U.S. government and giant corporations.
One consequence
of these attacks has been that a number of progressive grass roots
organizations in foreign countries have now become hesitant to take
advantage of the educational resources on strategic nonviolent action
provided by the Albert Einstein Institution and related groups.
As a result of fears that they may be linked to the CIA and other
U.S. government agencies, important campaigns for human rights,
the environment, and economic justice have been denied access to
tools that could have strengthened their impact. Furthermore, these
disinformation campaigns have damaged the reputation of a number
of prominent anti-imperialist activists and scholars who have worked
with such groups by wrongly linking them to U.S. interventionism.
Fortunately,
there is now an effort underway to fight back. Activists from groups
ranging from the Fellowship of Reconciliation to Code Pink to the
Brown Berets - as well as such radical scholars as Noam Chomsky,
Howard Zinn, and Paul Ortiz - are signing onto an open letter in
support of Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution.
*Stephen
Zunes is a professor of politics at the University of San Francisco
and a senior analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus.
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