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British Guardian backs CIA dirty tricks in Zimbabwe
By Ann Talbot
28 August 2002
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In its most outspoken statement yet on Zimbabwe, the Bush administration
has made it clear that it is taking steps to bring down President
Robert Mugabes government. US Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs Walter Kansteiner announced the shift in US
policy in a statement on August 21. He told reporters that Mugabes
government was illegitimate and irrational.
We do not see President Mugabe as the democratically
legitimate leader of the country, Kansteiner said. The
political status quo is unacceptable because the elections were
fraudulent.
The US was putting pressure on neighbouring states, Kansteiner
said, to correct that situation. At the same time
it was providing Zimbabwean opposition forcessuch as trade
unions, pro-democracy groups and human rights organisationswith
advice, training and finance to over throw Mugabe and establish
a new regime.
The US announcement that it intends to bring Mugabe down won
enthusiastic support from Britains Guardian, a newspaper
that prides itself on representing liberal opinion in Britain.
In an editorial on August 24 entitled Zimbabwe endgame
the Guardian supported the US initiativewhich it
described with utmost cynicism as tending toward the threatening
end of the diplomatic spectrum.
The Guardians embrace of CIA dirty tricks and
military aggression cuts through the human rights rhetoric with
which its has sought to garb its own campaign against the Mugabe
regimeand not for the first time. Political assassination,
invasions and coups détat have been the hallmarks
of US foreign policy in the second half of the twentieth century.
Once the Guardian would have registered its own meek protest.
This was not the case when former Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic was overthrown by a US-backed uprising, with the fulsome
support of the Guardians editorial staff, and it
is clearly not to be the case with regard to Mugabe. The Guardians
only stipulation is that whatever dirty deeds are planned must
be kept private since a grandstanding approach
would have a bad effect on international relations.
As far as the Guardian is concerned, it is perfectly
acceptable to overthrow a foreign government when it is in Britains
interests to do soand provided it can be done without arousing
mass opposition either in Britain or in the region concerned.
Privacy is everything in British ruling circles. There is no
sin greater than that of being found out, whether it is a case
of fornicating with the maid or assassinating a foreign ruler.
Thus a readiness to turn a blind eye to the truth and to employ
every form of political hypocrisy has become the essential requirement
of the liberal apologists for imperialism.
Recently, for example, the Guardians editorial
columns have voiced growing concerns about US plans to invade
Iraq and whether this can be morally and politically justified.
In reality, the paper has promoted this debate because it reflects
divisions within Britains political elite about how the
UKs interests may best be served.
War in the Middle East threatens to disrupt international relations
and destabilise friendly regimes; therefore the Guardian
gives vent to its liberal concerns. But when it considers a hostile
action by the US to be in Britains interests, then to hell
with diplomatic and legal niceties.
The Guardians response is essentially that which
Washington was seeking to elicit. Kansteiners statement
came as Britains Prime Minister Tony Blair found himself
under increasing pressure from his critics over both Zimbabwe
and Iraq. Members of Blairs own government have criticised
his support for US war plans in the Middle East and the Conservative
opposition has attacked his governments failure to defend
British interests in Zimbabwe.
It seems likely that the US is offering the UK assistance to
remove Mugabe in a quid-pro-quo arrangement. If the US uses its
longer military and secret service reach to bring down Mugabe,
Blair will be able to show his critics that his slavish adherence
to US foreign policy has been rewarded. But more important in
the long term than any back scratching for Blair, Kansteiners
announcement is a clear signal that the US is planning an aggressive
assertion of power in Southern Africa.
The World Socialist Web Site has previously pointed
out the Guardians role as an apologist for British colonial
ambitions in Zimbabwe. [ See Britains Guardian:
An apologia for imperialist intervention in Zimbabwe http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/apr2002/zimb-a03_prn.shtml]
In an editorial on March 14, the Guardian dismissed
Britains colonial history in Zimbabwe as barely relevant.
More than a century in which British colonialists drove Zimbabwean
farmers from their land and looted the countrys mineral
wealth was dismissed in this phrase. Today is the beginning
of history, the editorial declared, referring to the Zimbabwean
elections.
These editorials amount to a concerted campaign to manipulate
public opinion to accept deep-going political changes that will
involve a new colonial division of the world and the curtailment
of democratic rights.
This latest editorial on Zimbabwe confirms the analysis we
made then. Now, having wiped the slate clean of the previous crimes
that British governments and British owned companies carried out
in Zimbabwe, the journal is preparing its readers to accept a
new crime.
The Guardians editorial line reflects a shift
in the attitude of sections of the British political elite who
were forced to give up their empire after the Second World War
and have never reconciled themselves to it. They see the reckless
war-mongering of the US administration as an opportunity for the
UK to regain some of the power it lost then by rebuilding its
empire.
A leading spokesman for this trend is Robert Cooper, who unusually
for a civil servant has been allowed by his employers at the Foreign
Office to publish his views on the world situation, often in the
pages of the Guardian.
Coopers call for a new British empire is dressed up as
a humanitarian project. Kansteiner himself employed this type
of humanitarian justification for an intervention in Zimbabwe
advocated within the pages of the Guardian, by blaming
Mugabes land redistribution programme for the famine that
is afflicting Southern Africa. British Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw made the same point in an article in the Guardians
Sunday sister paper, the Observer, on August 25.
In the name of his land reform policies Mugabe
is reducing his people to starvation. Straw wrote. He claimed
that Zimbabwe was not a colonial victim, but a
self-made pariah.
While Mugabes land reform programme has certainly disrupted
production, it is by no means the primary cause of the countrys
problems. Contrary to Straws claims, Zimbabwe is a victim
of colonial oppression and its present economic condition can
be traced directly to its status as a former colony.
On independence in 1980 Zimbabwe inherited all the debts of
the former colonial regime. Under the direction of the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund, Zimbabwe incurred more debt.
In 1998 it owed US$5 billion and was paying more than a third
of its export earnings on debt repayments. The debt now stands
at US$10 billionmore than its annual gross domestic product.
In a pattern typical of colonial exploitation, Zimbabwes
economy is dependent on the export of primary products such as
tobacco and minerals, the prices of which have all collapsed in
recent yearsresulting in a severe economic decline. Since
1996 the value of its agricultural exports has fallen by 30 percent
and of minerals by 24 percent.
The structural adjustment programme designed by the World Bank
and IMF worsened the economic decline in Zimbabwe as in many other
former colonial countries. Between 1990 and 1996 Zimbabwes
gross domestic product fell by one fifth, while its debt rose
by 55 percent.
Mugabes programme of land redistribution is clearly not
the main factor causing famine. Drought is a frequent threat in
this region and the famine has also hit Malawi, Mozambique, Lesotho,
Swaziland and Zambia. What has made the situation so serious this
time is that none of the countries involved have adequate grain
reserves or sufficient foreign currency to buy grain on the world
market because of their economic decline.
Western governments have withheld food aid from Zimbabwe and
the other countries in the region, using the famine as a means
to tighten their control of Southern Africa. The proposed US/UK
action to change the regime in Zimbabwe would be a further escalation
of this attempt to re-establish colonial power in Africa.
Insofar as Mugabe bears responsibility for the present situation,
it is because his bourgeois nationalist programme allowed the
same pattern of colonial exploitation to continue after so-called
independence. Until 1999 he was prepared to follow all directives
from the IMF and World Bank and only ceased to do so when they
threatened his own hold on power. Even now that he has fallen
out with them, he has no realistic alternative to offer.
Mugabe remains a defender of the profit system just as he was
20 years ago when he came to power. The corruption and despotism
of his regime are not new phenomena. The main difference today
is that the transnational companies and Western governments want
to dispense with his services.
The kind of opposition to Mugabe that Jack Straw, Walter Kansteiner
and the Guardian express has nothing in common with the
interests of the mass of the Zimbabwean population. Their attacks
on Mugabe reflect the interests of the mining companies and big
business and the international financial institutions, not those
of the small farmers, the agricultural workers and the urban masses.
In comparison to the rest of sub-Saharan Africa, Zimbabwe maintained
a higher standard of living. The pro-IMF policies of the UK and
US governments would go much further than Mugabe in wiping out
all the modest social gains made by the Zimbabwean people.
At no point does the Guardian so much as question the
qualifications of the US government to introduce a democratic
regime in Zimbabwe. It did not even raise the fact that Kansteiner
represents a government that itself came to power through election
fraud.
The history the Guardian wishes to wipe out is not just
of the last century, but of even the most immediate past. The
paper is hoping to inculcate an attitude of forgetfulness that
is conducive to political passivity and disorientation, in which
its readers will respond uncritically to the most immediate propaganda
offensive without the benefit of reflection or memory.
This latest Guardian editorial on Zimbabwe is a cynical
attempt to justify a new colonial offensive. If the US and UK
governments bring Mugabe down, they will install an even more
pliant regime and oversee a further assault on the living standards
and democratic rights of the Zimbabwean population.
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