The new
Trajectory of Totalitarian Thinking
By Muktar M.
Omer, 17 January 2013
The tyranny of Ideology
In an absorbing
book ’’The devil in history’’ Romanian-American
political scientist Vladmir Ismaneau embarks on a comparative analysis of two
seemingly contradictory ideologies of the 20th century – Communism
(far left) and Fascism (far right) – and finds strikingly similarity between
these two systems of political totalitarism.
With polymathic
virtuosity, Ismaneau illuminates communism’s close affinity with fascism by
examining the ‘’intellectual origins, political passions, radicalism, utopian
ideals, and the visions of salvation and revolution’’ these two radical
movements espoused and pursued.
Communism and
Fascism share a dogmatic vision of social re-engineering to be achieved through
a ‘’scientific’’ political formula. Communism’s ultimate destiny was the
attainment of the dictatorship of the proletariat which supposedly emancipates
mankind from all forms of exploitation. Fascism envisioned an epoch of racial
purity (Hitler) or national splendor (Mussolini). Both ideologies dehumanized
their adversaries. Both are founded on the premise that certain groups or ideas
must be deservedly excluded or obliterated. In Bolshevik Russia, functionaries
of the Tsarist regime, the clergy and rich people were categorized as ‘’byvshie
liudi’’ (the former people) and were excluded from the ‘’new’’ Socialist order.
Stalin killed 20 million people in the name of Communism. Nazi Germany
systematically slaughtered or deported Jews and other ‘’subhuman’’ races.
These two most
conspicuous totalitarian philosophies of the 20th century had lots
of similarities but also differences. For instance, while communism, the
dictatorship of the party is enthroned through revolution, in Fascism, a
‘’charismatic and visionary leader’’ who is elected by voting consensuses is
the source of all ideas and guidance.
Ismaneau scrutinizes
the two systems ‘’absolute commitment to ideology’’ and illustrates how the
pursuit of a draconian political formula – which would take mankind to a
promised land of justice and purity – paved the way for all forms of
totalitarian thinking in the 20th century; how it led to ‘’a frenzy
of genocide, thought control and a complete annihilation of the concept of the
individual; and how it justified the orgy of violence that resulted in the
deaths of millions of human beings. The author denounces the ‘’nihilistic
principles of human subjugation and conditioning’’ pursued by communists and
fascists in the name of attaining ‘’presumably pure and purifying goals’’, and
concludes with a poignant refrains ‘’no ideological commitment, no matter how
absorbing, should ever prevail over the sanctity of human life’’.
Ismaneau did not
extend his analysis to the mayhem capitalism which sired imperialism,
colonialism and militarism inflicted on humanity for two millennia. After all,
foisting evil on humankind in the ostensible pursuit of good and promotion of
higher ideals is not exclusive to fascism and communism. Throughout the history
of mankind, mindless tyrants, self-styled revolutionaries, and religious and
political zealots used myriad of ideologies and belief systems as vindicating
motifs and mobilizing planks to unleash wars, to rob, to pillage, to enslave,
to oppress, to exterminate real and perceived adversaries. Predatory capitalism
actuated slavery. Colonialism underwrote French genocide against Algerians and
the dehumanization of indigenous populations in conquered lands. Colossal
crimes against humanity were committed in Chile, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan,
Japan, Africa – to name but few – in the last fifty years alone by presumably redemptive
ideologies.
Utopia – the dangerous ingredient
Vaclav Havel
defined ideology as something that offers human beings ‘’the illusion of
identity, of dignity, and of morality while making it easier for them to part
with them.’’ Ideologies have potent hypnotizing power. Ideologies therefore are
invariably astigmatic – which means they have a distorted vision of reality.
All Ideologies
also have the propensity to turn deadly, but as Steven Pinker argues in the
‘’Better Angels of Our Nature’’ some are more predisposed to generate violence
and misery than others. One of the things that makes ideologies dangerous is
the ‘’prospect of utopia’’. Ideologies that propagate visions of pleasure and
plenty can be described as messianic ideologies. ‘’Since utopias are infinitely
good’’ Pinker denotes, they sanction the end-justifies-the-means mentality. For
the utopia of these messianic doctrines to be attained, all obstacles must be
eliminated at all cost. Messianic ideologies cannot function without
‘’enemies’’. Most often, these ideologies identify the main source of societal
ills as a ‘’definable group’’ or thought, which becomes the ‘’enemy’’.
The import of
these points will become evident as we go into the thrust of this article.
Having provided
a general background on the dangers of messianic ideologies and the
communalities in their foundational premises, modus operandi and vision, this
article will trace the origins of Revolutionary Democracy – as practiced in
present day Ethiopia – to past totalitarian projects, and argues that Revolutionary
Democracy is not a new thinking but a synthesis of old ideologies and systems –
Marxism, Leninism, Maoism, Capitalism, Liberalism, etc. – renovated and
re-marketed to rationalize flagrant totalitarianism. The article asserts that
there is no logical or empirical evidence to support the putative link between
revolutionary democracy and recent economic development in Ethiopia. It further
argues that the ongoing national debate on the type of ideology Ethiopia should
adopt is worthless and irrelevant and posits that the debate should have been
about values not nebulous ideologies.
The false national debate
In the last two
decades, the national debate in academic circles in Ethiopia focused on the
merits and demerits of Revolutionary Democracy – espoused by the ruling
Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) – and the globally
hegemonic Liberal Democracy. The debate replicates the partisan divide in the
country and has rarely been dispassionate.
Without
extending the parameters of this debate any further, it is useful to give a
brief description of the core tenets of revolutionary democracy and Liberal
Democracy before delving into the central theme of any argument.
Revolutionary
Democracy prioritizes group rights over individual rights, advocates for
strong, interventionist government and the presence of a dominant political
party that stays in power for a period long enough to facilitate socio-economic
transformation. The distinctive attributes of a Liberal Democracy include free and
fair elections, economic freedom, genuine separation of the powers of the
executive, the legislative and the judiciary, human rights, a multiparty
system, the rule of law, freedom speech, free trade and the protection of
private property.
The relevance of
a particular ideology to a given country context and the pros and cons of
competing ideologies can be endlessly debated. However, these debates often
produce little more than scholastic perorations. They rarely create consensus
or yield outright winner. Each side argues from a position of blind conviction
and because there are enough ambiguities and variations within each ideology,
the argument becomes circular, tedious, and messy. This makes debates on
ideologies pointless.
A more useful
format could have been adopted. First, a set of values that must guide the
practical application of contending ideologies would be agreed on. Next, the
extent to which these mutually agreed moral axioms are adhered to in the
implementation of the relevant ideological theories would be evaluated. For
instance, freedom of speech and thought, rule of law, respect for human rights
and civil liberties could have been identified as the guiding set of values.
These universal moral principles enhance the collective welfare of humanity.
Any ideology that upholds these ethical principles has a higher chance of
preventing violence. Conversely, any ideology that prevaricates or openly
denigrates these values has a higher likelihood of leading to violence. These
guiding values and their practical implementation should inform what is good
for Ethiopia over and above feeble ideologies.
Therefore,
firstly, the national debate ought to have been whether these ethical
principles are respected in EPRDF’s Ethiopia.
Secondly, the
efficacy and primacy of revolutionary democracy doctrine must be examined
against its own practice, not against presumed failures and shortcomings of
liberal ideology or professed future returns of economic development.
Thirdly,
Ethiopia registered rapid economic growth in the last ten years. The ruling
party must be lauded and credited for the effective utilization of foreign aid
and for adopting sound economic policies such as agricultural-development led
industrialization (ADLI) and state sponsored micro-enterprise development
initiative. Researching the causative or correlative relationship between
development and revolutionary democracy is beyond the purview of this article.
But the putative linkage between the two factors should have been subjected to
logical and empirical interrogation. It is a causative fallacy to argue that
because B follows A, A is the reason for B. Sadly, proponents of revolutionary
democracy in Ethiopia frequently engage in this fallacy, and it seems they have
been granted a free pass for long.
It is logical to
suggest that recent economic development in Ethiopia has more to do with the
injection of foreign aid into the economy and less with revolutionary democracy
sloganeering. For example, without foreign aid, even such sensible economic
policies as ADLI, micro-enterprise development, and safety-net programmes that
address chronic food insecurity in Ethiopia, may not have amounted to much.
Economic ideas are fine, but to get to fruition, they need funds.
Is the main
cause of the present economic growth and infrastructural development in
Ethiopia foreign aid or ideology? Would social, economic and infrastructural
transformation have been achieved without the massive foreign development
assistance that averaged between USD 2 to 3 billion annually in the last
decade? Would the ‘’mixed economy’’ model – which is paraphrased to ‘’Developmental
state paradigm’’ in EPRDF political grammar – have brought about meaningful
economic returns without sustained western funding?
Only a proper
research could establish the existence or absence of a relationship between
revolutionary democracy and economic development in Ethiopia, but these
questions must be asked.
Parenthetically,
the EPRDF regime which owes its survival to the billions dollars of aid it gets
from the West ironically accuses opposition parties as lackeys of the West. It
attacks liberalism day and night but beseeches liberal economies for more aid.
How and why it gets away with all these contradictions should have been probed.
Perhaps most
crucially, why a supposedly superior and rescuing doctrine as revolutionary
democracy mortally fears, criminalizes, harasses and banishes contending ideas
should have at the heart of the national debate.
Revolutionary Democracy: the Utopia and Dogma
There is more to
the prefix ‘’revolutionary’’ in Revolutionary Democracy than a mere
appellation. It is the strand that ties revolutionary democracy to communism
and in some ways to Fascism. Deflected by miasmic comparisons of the scales of
the damages caused by these ideologies, we should not exonerate revolutionary
democracy simply because it has not inflicted as much pain as the two other
totalitarian ideas. We need to look at the utopia and the dogma inherent in
revolutionary democracy, which makes it as dangerous as any other messianic
ideology.
The vision of
EPRDF’s revolutionary democracy is a ‘’new and prosperous Ethiopia’’ where the
rights of nations and nationalities are ‘’fully respected’’. Granted, some
visions are benign and more realistic than others. Granted, it is unfair to
equate the achievable vision of an economically better-off and politically
inclusive Ethiopia to communism’s romantic pursuit of a proletarian
dictatorship and Fascism’s search for racial purity and ultranationalist
grandeur. Yet, communism, fascism, and Revolutionary Democracy all have one
thing in common: ‘’absolute commitment to ideology’’.
The similarity
becomes clearer when dogma creeps into this commitment. EPRDF believes that it
is the sole owner of the ideas that can steer Ethiopia towards the nirvana of
an inclusive, prosperous and peaceful country. It is not this absolute belief
in the righteousness of its own doctrine that makes EPRDF and revolutionary
democracy dangerous. It is its stubborn resolve to destroy rival ideas by all
means possible that makes it dangerous as the systems that pursue seemingly
more sinister utopias. John Gray – Emeritus Professor at the London School of
Economics – says that ‘’in politics, the other face of radical evil is an
inhuman vision of radical goodness’’. Revolutionary Democracy personified by
EPRDF arrests and executes political opponents, harasses dissenting ideas,
strips Ethiopians of all political rights and civil liberties for the good
vision of ‘’a prosperous Ethiopia’’. At best, it is a vision of radical
goodness which becomes an inhuman vision because it justifies the evil of
oppression.
Revolutionary Democracy at work
Ernest W.
Lefever contends that the defeat of Communism and Fascism has not eliminated
the return of totalitarian thinking and temptations. He was remarkably
prescient when he warned that ‘’out of the rubble of failed systems, the chaos
of defeat, and the agony of alienated peoples, a new totalitarian savior could
again arise proclaiming a new utopia’’.
In the foregoing
sections, we have seen how totalitarian ideologies crave adversaries and feed
on scapegoats. Examples from recent Ethiopian political history would help crystallize
this notion.
In 1974, Emperor
Haile-Selassie’s 44 years reign ended. Revolutionary Ethiopians rocked the
foundations of monarchy but the coup de grace was served by a military junta
led by Colonel Mengistu Haile-Mariam. The junta ordained a Marxist ideology –
the precursor to today’s ‘’revolutionary democracy’’. In fact, ‘’revolution’’
and ‘’democracy’’ became the junta’s catchwords. The DERG – as the junta would
later call itself – terrorized the Ethiopian people for 17 years, unleashing
waves of violence under different pretexts.
First, it
declared a class war on ‘’Imperialists, the bourgeoisie, semi-bourgeoisie’’,
next came the turn of own ideological allies – The Ethiopian People’s
Revolutionary Party (EPRP), All-Ethiopian Socialist Movement (alias MEISON) –
who started to embrace a different interpretation of Marxism. Then, Eritrean
and Tigrayan nationalists started an armed struggle against the DERG and the
junta morphed into a defender of ‘’Ethiopian unity’’ and turned its gun on
Tigrayans and Eritreans.
In 1991,
Mengistu’s regime collapsed. The triumphant Tigray People’s Liberation Front
(TPLF) arrived as the ‘’new savior’’. Revolutionary Democracy quickly found its
enemy. TPLF picked Amharas – who immediately become Ethiopia’s ‘’byvshie
liudi’’ (former people) – as its focal enemy. TPLF unleashed an unremitting
vitriolic propaganda against Amharas and Unionist Ethiopians. Adjectives with
accusatory undertones such as ‘’chauvinists’’ and ‘’Neftegna’’ (armed settlers)
permeated the new political vocabulary. Amharas were summarily categorized as
beneficiaries of the old systems. They were identified as the source of all
societal ills in Ethiopia. In Oromia – Bedano (Harar) and Arbagugu (Arsi) –
Amhara civilians were butchered. TPLF did not commit the crimes; but the
massacres were the macabre fruits of sustained TPLF anti-Amhara propaganda.
The Amharas were targeted mainly because they
were the most vocal opponents of the secession of Eritrea. There is another
theory which paints the witch-haunt against Amharas as a mere extension of
historical power struggle between the two Semitic nationalities in Northern
Ethiopia. The advent of ethnic-nationalism and TPLF’s iron hand dealt a
decisive blow to Amhara and centralist fight back.
The Amhara
‘’threat’’ was quickly neutralized, but the next enemy did not take long to
emerge. The Oromos – the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia – demanded their
‘’rightful place’’ in the new political arrangement. TPLF found its second
enemy, which it destroyed with astounding efficiency. Documentary ‘’evidences’’
showing ‘’narrow’’ Oromo ‘’extremists’’ slaughtering Amhara settlers in Bedano,
Arbagugu and other areas started to surface. Evidences, that never bothered
TPLF before it fell out with the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF)! The atrocities
were real. Extremist Oromos allegedly carried out the massacres. TPLF is
culpable though, because it was the main instigator of hate against Amharas.
The third enemy
of TPLF would turn out to be its alter ego Sha’bia (EPLF) – the ruling party in
Eritrea and TPLF’s erstwhile ally and mentor. The May 1998 to June 2000
Ethio-Eritrea war was not a war of choice for TPLF. Eritrea started the war.
Nonetheless, the TPLF found yet another scapegoat to continue internal
political repression. The war also gave the TPLF a breathing space as most
Ethiopians postponed their anger against the regime and stood by the TPLF-led
government in a show of remarkable patriotism.
In 2005, buoyed
by the support it received from the Ethiopian people during the war, TPLF/EPRDF
opened up the political arena and granted opposition parties some space for
competition. It would prove to be a turning point for democracy in Ethiopia.
The consensus is that the EPRDF lost that election to the opposition. The biggest
winner was the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) – alas Kinijit in
Amharic. The CUD competed in a political agenda that emphasized ‘’national
unity’’ and opposed ethnic federalism. The success of the CUD shocked EPRDF to
the core.
To EPRDF, not
only did the CUD triumph represent the revival of the detested ‘’Amharas’’, it
awakened it to the grim reality that it can never win a free and fair
elections. TPLF’s coalition partners in the EPRDF – ANDM (Amhara), Oromo
(OPDM), SEPDM (Southern region) –were all routed in their respective regions
because the nations and nationalities they purported to represent veritably saw
them as veritable puppets of the TPLF.
EPRDF firmly
closed whatever little political space that existed. So much so, that in the
2010 elections, it ‘’won’’ all but one of the 547 seats in the House of
Representatives (the Parliament). Today, EPRDF members and supporters control
all state and religious institutions at the Federal level and in Amhara,
Oromia, Tigray, Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ (SNNP) region. The
Judiciary, Security sector, and economy are firmly in the hands of EPRDF.
Satellite parties allied to EPRDF rule the so-called ‘’developing’’ regions –
Somalis, Afar, Benishanul, Harari, and Gambella.
More recently, ‘’anti-terrorism’’
accorded EPRDF a new scapegoat. Centralist political parties are branded relics
of the past. Ethno-nationalist who embraced ethnic federalism but advocate for
a genuine implementation of the project are labeled ‘’terrorists’’ and are outlawed.
Serious opposition parties are banned from operating inside the country and
operate in exile. Opposition parties inside the country can issue statements
through foreign media or by organizing subdued events but they cannot freely
mobilize the grassroots. Elections are meaningless because the National
Election Board (NEBE) is a functionary of the ruling party/government.
Revolutionary Democracy has a dual attribute.
Like Communism, EPRDF and its satellite parties control government at federal
and regional levels, which makes the party and the government one and the same.
Like Fascism, all ideas in revolutionary democracy emanate from its
‘’magnetic’’ leader Meles Zenawi. Up until and even after his death, he was and
continues to be credited as the originator of all ideas that EPRDF implements;
particularly, the ones that worked.
This is the
anatomy of a Revolutionary Democracy.
Conclusion
Debating the
goodness or badness of one or another ideology is pointless. No ideology has a
silver bullet that would take humanity to a worldly paradise. There are enough
ambiguities in the theories of every ideology. Even if the theories of one
ideology are found more relevant to a given context, it means nothing unless
the practice matches the theory. Practice often deviates from theory in
totalitarian ideologies.
But more
importantly, arguing over ideologies is the thing of the past. If the 20th
century was the era of ideology, the 21st century is the age of
values. Freedom and justice which are innate human desires matter to humanity
more than erratic ideologies, because these enduring values are the only
institutions can minimize the occurrence of violence. Ideologies by their
nature do not avert violence, they fuel it.
If we have
embrace ideologies, we should embrace only those accept – in theory and
practice – the inviolability of the sanctity of human life. The quality and
relevance of a doctrine must be judged against this singular moral principle.
An ideology that stifles freedom of speech, suspends human rights and imposes
an arbitrary application of law is an anathema to human progress and a recipe
for violence.
Today, in Ethiopia,
systematic and gross violations of human rights are committed. There is no
independent judiciary to uphold the rule of law. The regime arbitrarily applies
rules of natural justice and the rule of law, thereby turning the avenue of
society into a scary chamber where injustice is domesticated. Plighted by
politically correct thinking, the EPRDF stifles freedom of thought and freedom
of expression. The regime is bent on crushing individual thinking and
browbeating the Ethiopian nation into accepting that an idea could only be
valid if it came from ‘’the correct’’ group, which in this case happens to be
the top echelons of EPRDF.
EPRDF’s
revolutionary democracy has all the hallmarks of a messianic ideology with its
utopia, dogma and concomitant violence. It is not a new ideology by any stretch
of imagination. It is a revised trajectory of totalitarian thinking presented
as a redeeming doctrine, and has a lot in common with past totalitarian
schemes. George Steiner’s decisive contention in the ‘’Grammars of creation’’
comes to mind. ‘’We have no more beginnings’’. How true!
Equally, Liberal
Democracy is not a perfect system. Some of its core postulates such as the
relationship between elections and citizen participation in resource allocation
and political decision-making and the validity of some of its core economic
propositions have been criticized since its earliest days by Marxists,
socialists, left-wing anarchists, empiricists, and proponents of ‘’direct’’
democracy. However, the consensus is that while not a perfect system, Liberal
Democracy reduces political uncertainty and instability by providing the public
with regular chances of change those in power without changing the legal basis
for government.
At any rate, the
deficiencies of Liberalism cannot expiate the sins of revolutionary democracy.
No comments:
Post a Comment