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Today's
Stories
July
17, 2004
Gary
Leupp
Apocalypse Now: Why the Book of Revelations
is Must Reading
July
16, 2004
Dave
Zirin
Adonal Foyle: Master of the Lefty Lay-Up
Shervan
Sardar
Dershowitz, the ICJ and Jim Crow Laws
Ron
Jacobs
The Lil' Engine That Couldn't: Kucinich Surrenders on Anti-War
Plank
Robert
Fisk
Iraq, According to Edgar Allen Poe:
Coffin Bombs in Baghdad
Greg
Moses
The Forts of Iraq
Mickey
Z.
Ad Infinitum?: Presidential Campaigns in the Age of TV
Dan
Bacher
A Landmark Win for Salmon and the Tribes
Dave
Lindorff
The Mumia Case: Support from NAACP,
But a Movement in Shambles
Paul
McGeough
Did Allawi Shoot Inmates in Cold Blood?
Website
of the Day
10 Reasons to Fire Bush (and 9 Reasons Kerry Won't Be Any Better)
July
15, 2004
Heather
Williams
McMissing
the Point: Supersize Me Crashes on Its Message
Werther
Iraq: Follow the Money
Tom
Crumpacker
The Birds of Guantanamo
Brian
Cloughley
What Does the Bush Regime Object To?
Bill
Christison
Reorganize the CIA? Of Course,
But...

July
14, 2004
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Chronicle of a Nomination Foretold:
the Green Deceivers
Neve
Gordon
Of Socrates and the Apartheid Wall
Diane
Christian
The Priesthood of Death
Stefan
Wray
Who Benefits from Missing Data at Los Alamos Nuclear Lab?
Josh
Frank
The Nader / Dean Debate
Conn
Hallinan
Divide and Conquer as Imperial Rules
Elizabeth
Weill-Greenberg
Bring My Brother Home!: Class, War
and Education
Website
of the Day
Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear and the Selling of US Empire

July
13, 2004
Ray
McGovern
The CIA and Iraq: an Intelligence
Debacle...and Worse
Mark
Donham
The Sierra Club's Inexplicable Treatment of Cynthia McKinney
Ben
Tripp
Politus Interruptis: With Friends Like
These, Who Needs Electorates?
Mark
Gaffney
Slipping Towards Armageddon: Israel
in Iraq
Dave
Lindorff
Osama Wins! Election Postponed!
Chris
White
Double Think: the Bedrock of Marine
Indoctrination

July
10 / 12, 2004
Kathleen
Christison
The Problem with Neutrality Between
Palestinians and Israel
Janine
Pommy Vega
Trail of the Comet: a Gathering of the World's Poets Against
War
Sherry
Wolf
From Maverick to Party Attack Dog: Howard Dean Gay-Bashes Nader
Saul
Landau and Farrah Hassen
A Transfer of Power, Sort Of
Michael
Donnelly
How to Steal an Election: the Green Version, 2004
Stanton
/ Madsen
Iraq Survey Group: Rumsfeld's al-Qaeda?
Richard
Lichtman
The End of Innocence: Reflections on American Pathology
Gila
Svirsky
Thank You, Your Honors: a Legal Blow to the Wall
Kurt
Nimmo
Clinton's Life
Toni
Solo
Empire-Speak: What Roger Noriega Really Means
Ron
Jacobs
The Black Panthers and the Rest
Camelo
Ruiz Marrero
Gene Warfare in Oaxaca: Genetic Mutation of Mexican Maize
Omar
Barghouti
Wither the Empire: Rise of a Global Resistance
Poets'
Basement
Curtis and Albert

July
9, 2004
Dave
Zirin
Carlos Delgado on Deck: Blue Jays Slugger
Stands Up Against War
Justin
Delacour
Wishing Kerry Would Shut Up About
Latin America
Robert
Fisk
Iraq in Reverse: Martial Laws Fuel Insurgency
Boris
Kagarlitsky
Two Congresses and a Funeral
William
S. Lind
The October Surprises
Sibel
Edmonds
Our Broken System: John Ashcroft's War on Truth
Ron
Jacobs
Reading Tea Leaves: What Vietnam Tells Us About Iraq's Future
Gary
Leupp
The Lie That Will Not Die: Cheney and
the Iraq/al-Qaeda Link

July
8, 2004
Niranjan
Ramakrishnan
The Inexplicable John McCain
Toufic
Haddad
Protesting Israel's Apartheid Wall:
a Letter from the Hunger Strikers' Tent
Dave
Lindorff
Liberation as Martial Law
Joshua
Frank
The Fall: How Beltway Dems Sank Howard
Dean
Christopher
Brauchli
Bush & Cheney Play the Hitler Card
James
Petras
The Truth About Jimmy Carter

July
7, 2004
John
Chuckman
Kerry's BBQ: a Deafening Silence
of Meaning
Virginia
Tilley
A Line in the Sand: Azmi Bishara's
Hunger Strike
Susan
Martinez
A Letter to Bill Cosby
Mickey
Z
Elie Wiesel's Strange Parade
Michael
Donnelly
Our Own Private Wilderness: Trusting the Land in the Inland Empire
Sean
Donahue
Boston Social Forum: the Dems aren't the Only Show in Beantown
Diane
Christian
Sovereignty and Freedom in Iraq
July
6, 2004
Lisa
Viscidi
Fleeing Guatemala: Central Americans
Risk Lives to Reach El Norte
Marc
Norton
The Felonious Five Ride Again: the
Supreme Court and Enemy Combatants
James
Brooks
Chemical Warfare on the West Bank?
Ray
McGovern
Porter Goss as CIA Director?
William
Cook
Legacy of Deceit: If Dante Knew of Bush and the Neo-Cons...
July
5, 2004
Forrest
Hylton
US Imperialism in Latin America: Sept.
11, July 4 and Systematic Torture
Chris
White
A Former Marine Sgt. on the Meaning
of Independence Day
Joe
Bageant
Cranky Reflections on the 4th of July
Robert
Jensen
Stupid White Movie: What Michael Moore
Misses About the Empire
Kathy
Kelly
"Two Days an' a Wake-Up"
July
3 / 4, 2004
Elaine
Cassel
Bush's Police State and Independence
Day
Stan
Goff
ABC of Opportunism: "Progressive"
Latin American Leaders Support the Coup in Haiti
Snehal
Shingavi
"We Want Real Justice for Bhopal": Two Survivors Speak
Out
Bruce
Anderson
The Cheney-Leahy Metaphor and the Greens
Sharon
Smith
Twilight of the Greens: the Chokehold of "Anybody But Bush"
Josh
Frank
Ralph Nader's Revolt: an Interview with Greg Bates
Robert
Fisk
Pentagon Tried to Censor Saddam's Hearing
Joe
Bageant
Sons of a Laboring God: Leftnecks Unite!
Brian
Cloughley
Fortress Bush and the One Law Doctrine
Justin
Delacour
The Anti-Chavez Echo Chamber: Venezuela's Media Tycoons
William
S. Lind
Saudi Spillover
Linda
S. Heard
A Joke Called "Justice"
Greg
Moses
"It's Illegal, But It's Our Right": Korean Labor Won't
Back Down
Ron
Jacobs
"Ain't You Proud to be White on Independence Day?"
Toni
Solo
Weary of Indigenous Resistances? Just Pretend They're Not There
Dan
Nagengast
Chicken Manure as Cattle Food: Safe, But Do We Want to Eat It?
Stew
Albert
Brando, a Personal Recollection
Dave
Zirin
From the Black Panthers to Sacheen Littlefeather: a Eulogy for
Our Brando
Patrick
W. Gavin
The Progressive Case for Dodgeball
Steven
Rosenthal / Junaid Ahmad
The Problem is Bigger Than the Bushes: a Review of F911
Poets'
Basement
Kearney, Ford and Davies
Website
of the Day
Global Peace Solution
July
2, 2004
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Suicide Right on the Stage: the Demise
of the Green Party
Douglas
Valentine
Fahrenheit 911: Mocking the Moral Crisis of Capitalism
Gary
Leupp
"Just Because I Could": On Obscenities and Opportunities
Lee
Ballinger
Illegal People: Kerry Opposes Immigrant Rights
Robert
Fisk
Saddam in the Dock: Confused? Hardly
CounterPunch
Wire
"What Law Formed This Court?": a Transcript of Saddam's
Arraignment
Christopher
Brauchli
Bush's Drug Card Lottery: the Price Ain't Right
Saul
Landau
Buzz Words and Venezuela
July 1, 2004
Katherine
van Wormer
Bush's Damaged Mind: the Madness in
His Method
Joe
Bageant
Is Our President a Whackjob? Does It Matter?
William
James Martin
The Dogma of Richard Perle
Dave
Lindorff
Bush's Evacuation Moment
Robert
Fisk
Bread and Circus Trials in Iraq
Alan
Maass
Green Party in Reverse
Website
of the Day
Michael Moore and Israel: Blind or a Coward?
June
30, 2004
Kurt Nimmo
Nicholson
Baker's Checkpoint: a New Kind of Anger About Bush
Tariq
Ali
Getting Away with Murder in Iraq
Jennifer
Van Bergen
Bush and the Detainees
Douglas
Valentine
Apotheosis of the Psychopaths: Instead of Fahrenheit 9/11, Rescreen
The Quiet American
David
Price
Fahrenheit 9/11 Through the McCain-Feingold Looking Glass
Roger
Normand
America's Criminal Occupation of Iraq
Stan
Cox
Sanitized for Your Protection: Ashcroft's
War on Art
Henry
David Thoreau
On the Futility of Bush v. Kerry: All Voting is a Kind of Gaming
Ben
Tripp
Who Dast Call Him Liar: a Rebuttal to Nicholas Kristof





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|
Weekend
Edition
July 17 / 18, 2004
The
George Bush of Africa
Pretoria
Chooses Subimperialism
By
PATRICK BOND
The first week of July witnessed two
important markers of Africa's geopolitical trajectory. In Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia, at the African Union (AU) summit, the South
African government took major steps to influence the organization,
by winning contests to host its parliament and to dominate its
peace/security division (the AU's New Partnership for Africa's
Development is already located near Pretoria). Meanwhile, in
Washington, the Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) publicly launched a U.S.-Africa policy blueprint, requested
by Colin Powell and the Congress.
The main controversy in Addis
was a two-year old report on the Zimbabwean government's systemic
human rights abuses, which Robert Mugabe's government dubiously
denied having seen, although it had been circulating for four
months. Harare's delaying tactics won support from Pretoria's
foreign affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who a year earlier
had pronounced, "We will never criticize Zimbabwe."
As the disappointed Catholic archbishop of Bulawayo, Pious Ncube,
concluded of the AU delegates, "All they do is back each
other up and drink tea."
The CSIS report on "Rising
US Interests in Africa" emphasizes seven interventions:
Sudan, whose oil is craved by Washington; Africa's decrepit capital
markets, which could "jump start" Bush's gimmicky Millennium
Challenge Account; energy, especially the "massive future
earnings by Nigeria and Angola, among other key West African
oil producers;" wildlife conservation; "counter-terrorism"
efforts, which include "a Muslim outreach initiative;"
peace operations, which can be transferred to African troops
thanks to new G8 funding; and AIDS, whose treatment is feared
by pharmaceutical corporations because it will require generic
drugs.1 In all but Sudan, South African cooperation will be crucial
for the new U.S. imperial agenda.
This is a good time to assess
Washington-Pretoria relations. In May, post-apartheid South Africa
turned 10 years old. Delight can legitimately be expressed by
internationalists and anti-racists, including progressive U.S.
activists who supported the African National Congress (ANC) and
who pressed the U.S. Congress and the Reagan/Bush administrations
to impose sanctions during the crucial 1980s.
The White House and State Department
were, of course, weak and compromised when opposing apartheid,
even during its death-throes, in the wake of many decades of
explicit support. A reminder of the "constructive engagement"
legacy was provided by Reagan's death in June, based on Chester
Crocker's own 1980 assessment of his mandate as Assistant Secretary
of State for Africa: "The only thing Ronald Reagan knows
about South Africa is that he's on the side of the whites."
However, political amnesia was recommended by South Africa's
president Thabo Mbeki, who traveled from the Sea Island, Georgia
G8 Summit to the funeral and remarked to National Public Radio,
"For those of us who were part of the struggle against apartheid,
it was actually during Reagan's presidency [that] the United
States government started dealing with the ANC."2 (The CIA
cooperated with the Pretoria regime against the ANC, throughout
the Reagan era.)
In the new South Africa, however,
a power-sharing compromise deal among a tiny fraction of black
nationalist politicians and business cronies created an elite
transition that endowed a few Africans with enormous stature
and wealth, but impoverished the majority of ANC constituents.
Internationally, the new governing elites struck deals with such
multilateral institutions as the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund (IMF) that recall the subimperial designs of Victorian-era
colonialist Cecil Rhodes. The result has been a substitution
of class apartheid for racial apartheid. Today, thanks to a blueprint
partially designed at the World Bank ranging from macroeconomics
issues to policies impacting land, housing, and water, the government's
own statistics agency reports a 19 percent decline in black household
income from 1995-2000, while white people increased their income
by 15 percent and conditions have deteriorated further subsequently.
Although some state resources were redirected from white to black
people, the doubling of formal unemployment and the onset of
AIDS-ignored by the ANC until protest movements shook government
officials into providing medicines this year-have created a huge
domestic problem that helps to explain why South Africa's subimperial
project is sometimes veiled with counter hegemonic, and even
anti-imperialist, rhetoric.
1994-2001:
The warm-up period
Historians of Pretoria's foreign
policy will probably look at 1994-2001 as a warm-up period characterized
by ambitious human rights rhetoric in multilateral, regional,
and bilateral engagements. In at least one case, the banning
of landmines, South African officials did indeed live up to their
progressive rhetoric (via the 1997 Ottawa process). However,
hypocrisy was a growing problem, ranging from flirtation with
the Indonesian dictator Suharto-which facilitated a $25 million
contribution to ANC party coffers-and recognition of the Myanmar
military junta as a legitimate government to ill-considered arms
sales to countries that practiced mass violence (Colombia, Peru,
Turkey, Algeria) and a hapless invasion of neighboring Lesotho
to prop up an unpopular regime.
In addition, the overall balance
of forces around the world proved terribly hostile to Pretoria
following the 1994 transition. Even a leader of Mandela's stature
could not withstand the pressures of neoliberal economics and
Western geopolitical realities. The first period, through 2001,
witnessed the Western power bloc's quick dismissal of appeals
for relief: from unfair trade rules, debt and financial squeezes,
speculative attacks on the currency, foreign investment strikes,
and disputed patents on AIDS medicines and on the names of geographically
branded exports like port and sherry.
Mandela's unsuccessful attempt
to save Ken Saro-Wiwa from the Nigerian government's noose unveiled
the other side of African politics: compliance with Washington
by elites across most of the continent. To protect Western interests
(e.g., oil companies in the Nigerian Delta), to apply structural
adjustment policies, and to maintain order in desperate countries,
complicit African politicians and armies were notoriously repressive
and deeply resentful of any human rights or democratic pressure,
even from Mandela.
South Africa's first black
president was a great anti-apartheid leader, to be sure, but
he subsequently revealed the geopolitical swamp into which South
Africa rapidly sunk under his rule. During a talk to business
and social elites at Rhodes House in Cape Town last August, Mandela
offered the single most chilling historical metaphor possible,
"I am sure that Cecil John Rhodes would have given his approval
to this effort to make the South African economy of the early
21st century appropriate and fit for its time." 3
Rhodes made his fortune in
diamonds during the 1870s and 1880s and for 30 years terrorized
black mineworkers, black residents of the racially segregated
Cape province (which he governed as prime minister during the
1890s), and millions of black people across Southern Africa who
were subjects of his invasions, including the area long-named
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe and Zambia). Under Rhodes' rule, the world's
first concentration camps were established and were responsible
for the deaths of 14,000 blacks and 25,000 Afrikaner women and
children during the Anglo-Boer War.
While inaugurating the Mandela-Rhodes
Foundation, Nelson Mandela took the opportunity to criticize
as "outside interference" the lawsuits filed by Jubilee
South Africa and apartheid-victims groups demanding reparations
from U.S. corporations, along the lines of the recent Nazi-victims
ancestors' banking and slave labor cases. Mandela's complaint
that these civil cases challenged national sovereignty was considerably
weakened when Pretoria's justice minister later conceded that
he was pressured by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell to submit
an opposition brief to the New York courts.4 Among the friends
of the court arrayed against Mandela were retired Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, his successor, Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane,
and economist Joseph Stiglitz.5
One might contemplate whether
over the past decade Mandela, his successor, Thabo Mbeki, Trade
Minister Alec Erwin, and Finance Minister Trevor Manuel have
begun acting roles parallel to Cecil Rhodes' subimperial functions
a century before. For Queen Victoria, substitute George W. Bush.
Instead of the Victorian-era relations between the British state
and Rhodes, read the New Partnership for Africa's Development
and its many corporate backers. Likewise, the South African National
Defense Force's invasion of Lesotho in September 1998, justified
by Pretoria's desire to protect a controversial, corrupt mega-dam
from alleged sabotage threats, is reminiscent of the British
army's arrogance and power a century earlier.
Just as Rhodes had his media
cheerleaders from Cape Town to London, so too do many Western
publications regularly promote Mbeki as Africa's savior. Even
a usually more critical outlet, the Mail & Guardian, provided
a December 2003 "report card" giving Mbeki a C grade
overall but praising his international activities: "As Mbeki
nears the end of his first term in office, it is in the area
of foreign affairs that his legacy will rest. South Africa always
has a reserved seat at the head table at powerful multilateral
organizations and associations, and Africa is now a high agenda
item at the summits of the G8 major economies. If Mbeki were
to be rated on his performance on the international stage, he
would pass with flying colors."6
New Partnership
for Africa's Development (NEPAD)
The imperial head table has
indeed welcomed Mbeki. The mainstay of South African foreign
policy, NEPAD, was celebrated on the one hand by Washington,
London, Berlin, and the Bretton Woods institutions. The Bush
administration's main Africa hand declared it "philosophically
spot-on,"7 and the ex-IMF managing director, Michel Camdessus,
happily pronounced at the 2003 Evian G-8 meeting: "The African
heads of state came to us with the conception that globalization
was not a curse for them, as some had said, but rather the opposite,
from which something positive could be derived. You can't believe
how much of a difference this makes."8
On the other hand, though the
criticism is not mentioned by most mainstream commentators, NEPAD
is widely derided by African intellectuals-for example, within
the highly regarded Council for the Development of Social Science
Research in Africa-and by activists in the African Social Forum.
They describe Mbeki's project as the re-legitimization of the
Washington Consensus with only lip service to democracy and human
rights.
Given NEPAD's purely destructive
role in Zimbabwe, not to mention the absurd Nigerian election
in April 2003, Mbeki and co-NEPAD leader Olusegun Obasanjo apparently
did not take good governance seriously beyond the platitudes
designed for G-8 donor governments. Those governments need NEPAD,
as Camdessus' comment indicates, partly because it reinforces
their capacity to manipulate African countries through the aid
mechanism; NEPAD helps sell taxpayers the myth that Africa is
"reforming."
As for the subimperial part
of the equation, an increasingly important factor is the extractive,
exploitative role of Johannesburg businesses across the continent.9
Illustrating the threat of a Pretoria-Johannesburg alliance of
state and capital, Mbeki has successfully repulsed local opposition
from human rights and arms control groups in order to purchase
$6 billion worth of sophisticated weaponry from European corporations.
Hence, many observers on the
continent are wary of Pretoria's geopolitical interventions,
including the way that the central African peace deal facilitated
Johannesburg capital's penetration of the Democratic Republic
of the Congo (DRC). In 2002, the U.N. Security Council accused
15 South African companies of illegally "looting" the
DRC during late 1990s turmoil, which left an estimated three
million citizens dead. Some of those businesses gratefully accompanied
Mbeki on a January 2004 visit that generated a $10 billion trade/investment
package and the chance to participate in $4 billion worth of
World Bank tenders. Meanwhile, the widespread influence-peddling
scandals associated with the arms deal in late 2003 even briefly
threatened Deputy President Jacob Zuma, who allegedly solicited
a bribe from a French arms dealer in a manner that Pretoria's
justice minister conceded was "prima facie corruption."
A few journalists have also
picked up hostile vibes from the rest of the continent. In August
2003, South Africa's largest paper, the Sunday Times, remarked
on Southern African Development Community delegates' sentiments
at a Dar es Salaam regional summit, "Pretoria was 'too defensive
and protective' in trade negotiations [and] is being accused
of offering too much support for domestic production 'such as
duty rebates on exports' which is killing off other economies
in the region."10 More generally, the same paper reported
from the African Union meeting in Maputo the previous month that
Mbeki is "viewed by other African leaders as too powerful,
and they privately accuse him of wanting to impose his will on
others. In the corridors they call him the George Bush of Africa,
leading the most powerful nation in the neighborhood and using
his financial and military muscle to further his own agenda."11
How did the ANC government
so rapidly acquiesce to the imperial project? South African neoliberalism
was enforced by the IMF in a December 1993 loan agreed to by
the ANC leadership. In addition to the standard menu of structural
adjustment conditions, Camdessus insisted that Mandela reappoint
apartheid-era Finance Minister Derek Keys and Central Bank Governor
Chris Stals. However, at least four prior decisions were also
crucial: to formally drop "nationalization" from ANC
rhetoric (April 1992), to endorse the apartheid regime's intention
to join the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (June 1993),
to repay $25 billion of inherited apartheid-era foreign debt
(October 1993), and to grant the South African Reserve Bank formal
independence in an interim constitution (November 1993).
Various other international
economic incidents deserve mention. In January 1995, privatization
began in earnest, notwithstanding the ultimately fruitless attempt
by the ANC's labor allies to lock Pretoria into a restrictive
National Framework Agreement, which was often violated by the
government. South Africa abolished its main exchange controls
in March 1995, in the immediate wake of Mexican capital flight
that destroyed the peso's value. This was equivalent to an act
of unsafe international financial sex: Stals removed the country's
exchange-control condom, so that wealthy white people-beneficiaries
of apartheid-era looting-could skip the country to avoid the
steady erosion of emerging market economies. South Africa's only
protection was to raise interest rates to a record high, where
they have remained ever since, which further weakened the economy's
immune system. Later, during two episodes of rampant currency
devaluation between 1998 and 2001, Finance Minister Manuel inexplicably
granted permission to South Africa's biggest companies to shift
their financial headquarters and primary stock market listings
to London.
Even before September 2001,
it became clear to ANC elites how difficult the transition from
racial to class apartheid would be, given the meager rewards
offered from the imperial financial and commercial hubs. The
international political centers such as the United Nations and
the World Bank were more forthcoming, at least, allowing Mandela,
Mbeki, Manuel, and Erwin insider access. This was self-interested,
of course, as these institutions came under attack and attempted
to reinvent themselves with a dose of New South African legitimacy.
Thus in their first seven years
of democratic nation-state power and legitimacy, Pretoria politicians
temporarily presided over the U.N. Security Council, the board
of governors of the IMF and World Bank, the United Nations Conference
on Trade and Development, the Commonwealth, an international
AIDS conference, the World Commission on Dams, and many other
important global and continental bodies. From the standpoint
of Third World leadership, Pretoria also headed the Non-Aligned
Movement, the Organization of African Unity, and the Southern
African Development Community during the late 1990s.
Then, during a frenetic period
from September 2001 to September 2003, Mbeki and his colleagues
hosted, led, or played instrumental roles at the following 15
major international conferences or events: the World Conference
Against Racism in Durban (August-September 2001); the launch
of the New Partnership for Africa's Development in Abuja, Nigeria
(October 2001); the Doha, Qatar, ministerial summit of the World
Trade Organization (November 2001); regular World Bank/IMF meetings
(e.g., November 2001 in Ottawa); a World Economic Forum meeting
in New York City (February 2002); the U.N.'s Financing for Development
conference in Monterrey, Mexico (March 2002); the G-8 summit
in Kananaskis, Canada (June 2002); the Southern African World
Economic Forum meeting in Durban (June 2002); the African Union
launch in Durban (July 2002); the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg (August-September 2002); a U.N. heads
of state summit (September 2002); the Evian G-8 Summit (June
2003); the Cancun World Trade Organization ministerial (September
2003); the World Bank/IMF annual meeting in Dubai (September
2003); and the Socialist International in Sao Paolo (October
2003).
However, virtually nothing
was accomplished through these opportunities. What might have
been possible, had Mbeki and his lieutenants adopted liberal
principles and approaches to the globalization of people, rather
than of capital?
Alternative
strategies
* Instead of selling $250 million
worth of arms to the Iraq War aggressors-the United States and
United Kingdom-and warmly welcoming Bush a few weeks after his
illegal occupation of Baghdad, what if Mbeki had explicitly affronted
Bush (as, to his credit, Mandela did) and chose to strengthen
anti-war resistance and even U.S./U.K. boycotts in venues like
the Non-Aligned Movement and African Union?
* Instead of rejecting reparations
struggles designed to punish international financiers, corporations,
and the Bretton Woods institutions for supporting apartheid,
what if Mbeki and his colleagues nurtured the anti-racism cause
for the sake of repairing apartheid's racial and socio-economic
damage and to discourage big capital from future relations with
odious regimes?
* Instead of battling against
protesters and African trade officials from Seattle through Doha
to Cancun, what if Trade Minister Erwin tried uniting the continent
and its allies behind an alternative trade agenda so as to meet
popular needs, not those of global capital?
* Instead of pooh-poohing debt
cancellation as a strategy, what if Finance Manager Manuel joined
the Jubilee movement, denounced bogus World Bank and IMF plans
for crumbs of relief in the midst of amplified neoliberalism,
and helped to organize a debtors' cartel?
* Instead of a NEPAD considered
friendly to neoliberals but irrelevant by Zimbabweans hoping
for pro-democracy pressure, what if Pretoria helped establish
a bottom-up African program for recovery based upon partnerships
among Africans themselves?
* Instead of exacerbating the
World Summit on Sustainable Development's orientation to market-dominated
business as usual what if the ANC leaders tried to harmonize
and genuinely implement the agendas of poverty-eradication and
environmental sustainability?
In sum, Pretoria's reformers
have shown a tendency to "talk left" but "walk
right." They have served as both "compradors"-i.e.,
agents of the global establishment-and failures when it comes
to advancing their stated agenda. Consider Mbeki's remarks in
Kuala Lumpur last September, just prior to Cancun, as reported
in the Straights Times: "From South Africa's past experience,
it helped to have strong anti-apartheid groups in developed countries
to lobby its case. In the same way, [Mbeki] suggested linking
up with groups in developed countries, which were concerned about
the negative effects of globalization-which seemed to cause greater
imbalances and disparity among the rich and poor nations. "They
may act in ways you and I may not like and break windows in the
street but the message they communicate relates."12
Mbeki's use of the term "global
apartheid" is another indicator of the talk-left, walk-right
tendency, because a week after opening the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg in August 2002 with this phrase,
his government banned a peaceful protesting march at the summit
headquarters. His police also fired stun grenades into a crowd
of 800 people walking with candles outside the city's main university
in protest against the state's repeated, illegal, preventive
detentions of activists. Indeed, the scale of Mbeki's strategic
failure in international arenas helps explain the paranoia that
he and other ANC leaders exhibit when confronted on internationalist
terrain by what they regularly term the "ultra-left,"
namely the various global justice movements who remain unimpressed
by Pretoria's dance and who regularly demonstrate against NEPAD,
the World Economic Forum, and other high-profile neoliberal events
in South Africa.
Both South Africa and the rest
of the continent have been incorporated into a crisis-ridden,
parasitic, and neocolonial world economy. Would Cecil Rhodes
indeed have "given his approval to this effort" to
embroil Africa in such a volatile situation? The following three
remarks, the first two from the neoliberal Business Day newspaper
and the third from Mbeki's address to an ANC policy conference
in September 2002, provide a fair summary of the reasons why
one might answer in the affirmative:
* First, "The government
is utterly seduced by big business, and cannot see beyond its
immediate interests."13
* The "abiding impression"
left from George W. Bush's July 2003 Pretoria stopover was "of
a growing, if not intimate trust between himself and President
Thabo Mbeki. The amount of public touching, hugging and back
patting they went through was well beyond the call of even friendly
diplomatic duty."14
* As for the pesky critics:
"Domestic and foreign left sectarian factions... accuse
our movement of having abandoned the working people, saying that
we have adopted and are implementing neoliberal policies. These
factions claim to be pursuing a socialist agenda. They assert
that, on the contrary, we are acting as agents of the domestic
and international capitalist class and such multilateral organizations
as the World Bank and the IMF, against the interests of the working
people."15
These comments indicate why
the tenth anniversary of South African freedom is no cause for
celebration by the oppressed whether at home, elsewhere in Africa,
or across the Third World. It is, rather, a moment for us to
examine the contradictions associated with a decade of worsening
class apartheid and to challenge victimist rhetoric about global
inequality when it disguises status quo elite ambitions. Given
the ability of South Africa's progressive activists to consistently
identify and protest the hypocrisy of their government talking
left while walking right, it is fair to say that Pretoria's strategy
will soon be overtaken, not only by failure from above but by
resistance from below.
Endnotes
1.. Africa Policy Advisory
Panel (2004), "Rising US Stakes in Africa," Washington,
Centre for Strategic and International Studies, May, Executive
Summary.
2.. Citation from Mike Fleshman,
Southern Africa, 1980; Mbeki cite from National Public Radio,
14 June 2004; both at http://www.kabissa.org/mailman/listinfo/debate
3.. Sowetan, August 26, 2003.
I was inspired to revisit this remark and all that it implies,
and to provide this particularly sharp critique, because of an
April 20 debate on Laura Flanders' "Your Call Radio.org"
with Daniel Ngwepe, Pretoria's political counsellor at the South
African embassy in Washington. Ngwepe at one point described
South Africa's relations with the Bush regime as "brilliant."
Indeed.
4.. Reported on e-debate listserve,
August 30, 2003, and subsequently in the mainstream South African
media.
5.. Details are provided in
Patrick Bond, Talk Left, Walk Right: South Africa's Frustrated
Global Reforms (Pietermaritzburg, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Press, 2004, Chapter 3).
6.. Mail & Guardian, December
24, 2003.
7.. Walter Kansteiner, cited
in D. Gopinath, "Doubt of Africa," Institutional Investor
Magazine, May.
8.. http://www.g7.utoronto.ca/summit/2003evian/briefing_apr030601.html
9.. J. Daniel, V.Naidoo, and
S.Naidu, "The South Africans have Arrived: Post-Apartheid
Corporate Expansion into Africa," in J.Daniel, A.Habib,
and R.Southall, State of the Nation: South Africa 2003-04, (Pretoria,
Human Sciences Research Council, 2003).
10.. Sunday Times, August 24,
2003.
11.. Sunday Times, July 13,
2003.
12.. The Straights Times, September
3, 2003.
13.. Business Day, June 4,
2003.
14.. Business Day, July, 11
2003.
15.. Thabo Mbeki, "Statement
of the President of the African National Congress, Thabo Mbeki,
at the ANC Policy Conference," Kempton Park, September 27,
2002.
Patrick Bond, an analyst for Foreign
Policy in Focus where this article originally appeared, teaches
at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and has
authored two recent books: Against
Global Apartheid: South Africa Meets the World Bank, IMF and
International Finance, Zed Books, 2003 and Talk
Left, Walk Right: South Africa's Frustrated Global Reforms,
University of KwaZulu-Natal Press, 2004).
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