America and the dictators: From Ngo Dinh Diem to Hamid
Karzai
Writers Articles And Opinions
22 April 2010
By Alfred W. McCoy
The crisis has come suddenly, almost without
warning. At the far edge of American power in Asia,
things are going from bad to much worse than anyone
could have imagined. The insurgents are spreading fast
across the countryside. Corruption is rampant. Local
military forces, recipients of countless millions of
dollars in U.S. aid, shirk combat and are despised by
local villagers. American casualties are rising. Our
soldiers seem to move in a fog through a hostile,
unfamiliar terrain, with no idea of who is friend and
who is foe.
After years of lavishing American aid on him, the
leader of this country, our close ally, has isolated
himself inside the presidential palace, becoming an
inadequate partner for a failing war effort. His
brother is reportedly a genuine prince of darkness,
dealing in drugs, covert intrigues, and electoral
manipulation. The U.S. Embassy demands reform, the
ouster of his brother, the appointment of honest local
officials, something, anything that will demonstrate
even a scintilla of progress.
After all, nine years earlier U.S. envoys had taken a
huge gamble: rescuing this president from exile and
political obscurity, installing him in the palace, and
ousting a legitimate monarch whose family had ruled
the country for centuries. Now, he repays this
political debt by taunting America. He insists on
untrammeled sovereignty and threatens to ally with our
enemies if we continue to demand reforms of him. Yet
Washington is so deeply identified with the
counterinsurgency campaign in his country that walking
away no longer seems like an option.
This scenario is obviously a description of the Obama
administration’s devolving relations with Afghan
President Hamid Karzai in Kabul this April. It is also
an eerie summary of relations between the Kennedy
administration and South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh
Diem in Saigon nearly half a century earlier, in
August 1963. If these parallels are troubling, they
reveal the central paradox of American power over the
past half-century in its dealings with embattled
autocrats like Karzai and Diem across that vast,
impoverished swath of the globe once known as the
Third World.
With his volatile mix of dependence and independence,
Hamid Karzai seems the archetype of all the autocrats
Washington has backed in Asia, Africa, and Latin
America since European empires began disintegrating
after World War II. When the CIA mobilized Afghan
warlords to topple the Taliban in October 2001, the
country’s capital, Kabul, was ours for the taking --
and the giving. In the midst of this chaos, Hamid
Karzai, an obscure exile living in Pakistan, gathered
a handful of followers and plunged into Afghanistan on
a doomed CIA-supported mission to rally the tribes for
revolt. It proved a quixotic effort that required
rescue by Navy SEALs who snatched him back to safety
in Pakistan.
Desperate for a reliable post-invasion ally, the Bush
administration engaged in what one expert has called
“bribes, secret deals, and arm twisting” to install
Karzai in power. This process took place not through a
democratic election in Kabul, but by lobbying foreign
diplomats at a donors’ conference in Bonn, Germany, to
appoint him interim president. When King Zahir Shah, a
respected figure whose family had ruled Afghanistan
for more than 200 years, returned to offer his
services as acting head of state, the U.S. ambassador
had a “showdown” with the monarch, forcing him back
into exile. In this way, Karzai’s “authority,” which
came directly and almost solely from the Bush
administration, remained unchecked. For his first
months in office, the president had so little trust in
his nominal Afghan allies that he was guarded by
American security.
In the years that followed, the Karzai regime slid
into an ever deepening state of corruption and
incompetence, while NATO allies rushed to fill the
void with their manpower and material, a de facto
endorsement of the president’s low road to power. As
billions in international development aid poured into
Kabul, a mere trickle escaped the capital’s bottomless
bureaucracy to reach impoverished villages in the
countryside. In 2009, Transparency International
ranked Afghanistan as the world’s second most corrupt
nation, just a notch below Somalia.
As opium production soared from 185 tons in 2001 to
8,200 tons just six years later -- a remarkable 53% of
the country’s entire economy -- drug corruption
metastasized, reaching provincial governors, the
police, cabinet ministers, and the president’s own
brother, also his close adviser. Indeed, as a senior
U.S. antinarcotics official assigned to Afghanistan
described the situation in 2006, “Narco corruption
went to the very top of the Afghan government.”
Earlier this year, the U.N. estimated that ordinary
Afghans spend $2.5 billion annually, a quarter of the
country’s gross domestic product, simply to bribe the
police and government officials.
Last August’s presidential elections were an apt index
of the country’s progress. Karzai’s campaign team, the
so-called warlord ticket, included Abdul Dostum, an
Uzbek warlord who slaughtered countless prisoners in
2001; vice presidential candidate Muhammed Fahim, a
former defense minister linked to drugs and human
rights abuses; Sher Muhammed Akhundzada, the former
governor of Helmand Province, who was caught with nine
tons of drugs in his compound back in 2005; and the
president’s brother Ahmed Wali Karzai, reputedly the
reigning drug lord and family fixer in Kandahar. “The
Karzai family has opium and blood on their hands,” one
Western intelligence official told the New York Times
during the campaign.
Desperate to capture an outright 50% majority in the
first round of balloting, Karzai’s warlord coalition
made use of an extraordinary array of electoral
chicanery. After two months of counting and checking,
the U.N.’s Electoral Complaints Commission announced
in October 2009 that more than a million of his votes,
28% of his total, were fraudulent, pushing the
president’s tally well below the winning margin.
Calling the election a “foreseeable train wreck,” the
deputy U.N. envoy Peter Galbraith said, “The fraud has
handed the Taliban its greatest strategic victory in
eight years of fighting the United States and its
Afghan partners."
Galbraith, however, was sacked and silenced as U.S.
pressure extinguished the simmering flames of
electoral protest. The runner-up soon withdrew from
the run-off election that Washington had favored as a
face-saving, post-fraud compromise, and Karzai was
declared the outright winner by default. In the wake
of the farcical election, Karzai not surprisingly
tried to stack the five-man Electoral Complaints
Commission, an independent body meant to vet electoral
complaints, replacing the three foreign experts with
his own Afghan appointees. When the parliament
rejected his proposal, Karzai lashed out with bizarre
charges, accusing the U.N. of wanting a “puppet
government” and blaming all the electoral fraud on
“massive interference from foreigners.” In a meeting
with members of parliament, he reportedly told them:
“If you and the international community pressure me
more, I swear that I am going to join the Taliban.”
Amid this tempest in an electoral teapot, as American
reinforcements poured into Afghanistan, Washington’s
escalating pressure for “reform” only served to
inflame Karzai. As Air Force One headed for Kabul on
March 28th, National Security Adviser James Jones
bluntly told reporters aboard that, in his meeting
with Karzai, President Obama would insist that he
prioritize “battling corruption, taking the fight to
the narco-traffickers.” It was time for the new
administration in Washington, ever more deeply
committed to its escalating counterinsurgency war in
Afghanistan, to bring our man in Kabul back into line.
A week filled with inflammatory, angry outbursts from
Karzai followed before the White House changed tack,
concluding that it had no alternative to Karzai and
began to retreat. Jones now began telling reporters
soothingly that, during his visit to Kabul, President
Obama had been “generally impressed with the quality
of the [Afghan] ministers and the seriousness with
which they’re approaching their job.”
All of this might have seemed so new and bewildering
in the American experience, if it weren’t actually so
old.
Our Man in Saigon
The sorry history of the autocratic regime of Ngo Dinh
Diem in Saigon (1954-1963) offers an earlier
cautionary roadmap that helps explain why Washington
has so often found itself in such an impossibly
contradictory position with its authoritarian allies.
Landing in Saigon in mid-1954 after years of exile in
the United States and Europe, Diem had no real
political base. He could, however, count on powerful
patrons in Washington, notably Democratic senators
Mike Mansfield and John F. Kennedy. One of the few
people to greet Diem at the airport that day was the
legendary CIA operative Edward Lansdale, Washington’s
master of political manipulation in Southeast Asia.
Amid the chaos accompanying France’s defeat in its
long, bloody Indochina War, Lansdale maneuvered
brilliantly to secure Diem’s tenuous hold on power in
the southern part of Vietnam. In the meantime, U.S.
diplomats sent his rival, the Emperor Bao Dai, packing
for Paris. Within months, thanks to Washington’s
backing, Diem won an absurd 98.2% of a rigged vote for
the presidency and promptly promulgated a new
constitution that ended the Vietnamese monarchy after
a millennium.
Channeling all aid payments through Diem, Washington
managed to destroy the last vestiges of French
colonial support for any of his potential rivals in
the south, while winning the president a narrow
political base within the army, among civil servants,
and in the minority Catholic community. Backed by a
seeming cornucopia of American support, Diem proceeded
to deal harshly with South Vietnam’s Buddhist sects,
harassed the Viet Minh veterans of the war against the
French, and resisted the implementation of rural
reforms that might have won him broader support among
the country’s peasant population.
When the U.S. Embassy pressed for reforms, he simply
stalled, convinced that Washington, having already
invested so much of its prestige in his regime, would
be unable to withhold support. Like Karzai in Kabul,
Diem's ultimate weapon was his weakness -- the threat
that his government, shaky as it was, might simply
collapse if pushed too hard.
In the end, the Americans invariably backed down,
sacrificing any hope of real change in order to
maintain the ongoing war effort against the local Viet
Cong rebels and their North Vietnamese backers. As
rebellion and dissent rose in the south, Washington
ratcheted up its military aid to battle the
communists, inadvertently giving Diem more weapons to
wield against his own people, communist and
non-communist alike.
Working through his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu -- and this
should have an eerie resonance today -- the Diems took
control of Saigon’s drug racket, pocketing significant
profits as they built up a nexus of secret police,
prisons, and concentration camps to deal with
suspected dissidents. At the time of Diem's downfall
in 1963, there were some 50,000 prisoners in his
gulag.
Nonetheless, from 1960 to 1963, the regime only
weakened as resistance sparked repression and
repression redoubled resistance. Soon South Vietnam
was wracked by Buddhist riots in the cities and a
spreading Communist revolution in the countryside.
Moving after dark, Viet Cong guerrillas slowly began
to encircle Saigon, assassinating Diem’s unpopular
village headmen by the thousands.
In this three-year period, the U.S. military mission
in Saigon tried every conceivable counterinsurgency
strategy. They brought in helicopters and armored
vehicles to improve conventional mobility, deployed
the Green Berets for unconventional combat, built up
regional militias for localized security, constructed
“strategic hamlets” in order to isolate eight million
peasants inside supposedly secure fortified compounds,
and ratcheted up CIA assassinations of suspected Viet
Cong leaders. Nothing worked. Even the best military
strategy could not fix the underlying political
problem. By 1963, the Viet Cong had grown from a
handful of fighters into a guerrilla army that
controlled more than half the countryside.
When protesting Buddhist monk Quang Duc assumed the
lotus position on a Saigon street in June 1963 and
held the posture while followers lit his
gasoline-soaked robes which erupted in fatal flames,
the Kennedy administration could no longer ignore the
crisis. As Diem’s batons cracked the heads of Buddhist
demonstrators and Nhu’s wife applauded what she called
“monk barbecues,” Washington began to officially
protest the ruthless repression. Instead of
responding, Diem (shades of Karzai) began working
through his brother Nhu to open negotiations with the
communists in Hanoi, signaling Washington that he was
perfectly willing to betray the U.S. war effort and
possibly form a coalition with North Vietnam.
In the midst of this crisis, a newly appointed
American ambassador, Henry Cabot Lodge, arrived in
Saigon and within days approved a plan for a
CIA-backed coup to overthrow Diem. For the next few
months, Lansdale’s CIA understudy Lucien Conein met
regularly with Saigon’s generals to hatch an elaborate
plot that was unleashed with devastating effect on
November 1, 1963.
As rebel troops stormed the palace, Diem and his
brother Nhu fled to a safe house in Saigon’s
Chinatown. Flushed from hiding by promises of safe
conduct into exile, Diem climbed aboard a military
convoy for what he thought was a ride to the airport.
But CIA operative Conein had vetoed the flight plans.
A military assassin intercepted the convoy, spraying
Diem’s body with bullets and stabbing his bleeding
corpse in a coup de grâce.
Although Ambassador Lodge hosted an embassy
celebration for the rebel officers and cabled
President Kennedy that Diem's death would mean a
"shorter war,” the country soon collapsed into a
series of military coups and counter-coups that
crippled army operations. Over the next 32 months,
Saigon had nine new governments and a change of
cabinet every 15 weeks -- all incompetent, corrupt,
and ineffective.
After spending a decade building up Diem's regime and
a day destroying it, the U.S. had seemingly
irrevocably linked its own power and prestige to the
Saigon government -- any government. The “best and
brightest” in Washington were convinced that they
could not just withdraw from South Vietnam without
striking a devastating blow against American
“credibility.” As South Vietnam slid toward defeat in
the two years following Diem’s death, the first of
540,000 U.S. combat troops began arriving, ensuring
that Vietnam would be transformed from an
American-backed war into an American war.
Under the circumstances, Washington searched
desperately for anyone who could provide sufficient
stability to prosecute the war against the communists
and eventually, with palpable relief, embraced a
military junta headed by General Nguyen Van Thieu.
Installed and sustained in power by American aid,
Thieu had no popular following and ruled through
military repression, repeating the same mistakes that
led to Diem’s downfall. But chastened by its
experience after the assassination of Diem, the U.S.
Embassy decided to ignore Thieu’s unpopularity and
continue to build his army. Once Washington began to
reduce its aid after 1973, Thieu found that his troops
simply would not fight to defend his unpopular
government. In April 1975, he carried a hoard of
stolen gold into exile while his army collapsed with
stunning speed, suffering one of the most devastating
collapses in military history.
In pursuit of its Vietnam War effort, Washington
required a Saigon government responsive to its
demands, yet popular with its own peasantry, strong
enough to wage a war in the villages, yet sensitive to
the needs of the country’s poor villagers. These were
hopelessly contradictory political requisites. Finding
that civilian regimes engaged in impossible-to-control
intrigues, the U.S. ultimately settled for
authoritarian military rule which, acceptable as it
proved in Washington, was disdained by the Vietnamese
peasantry.
Death or Exile?
So is President Karzai, like Diem, doomed to die on
the streets of Kabul or will he, one day, find himself
like Thieu boarding a midnight flight into exile?
History, or at least our awareness of its lessons,
does change things, albeit in complex, unpredictable
ways. Today, senior U.S. envoys have Diem’s cautionary
tale encoded in their diplomatic DNA, which
undoubtedly precludes any literal replay of his fate.
After sanctioning Diem’s assassination, Washington
watched in dismay as South Vietnam plunged into chaos.
So chastened was the U.S. Embassy by this dismal
outcome that it backed the subsequent military regime
to a fault.
A decade later, the Senate’s Church Committee
uncovered other U.S. attempts at
assassination-cum-regime-change in the Congo, Chile,
Cuba, and the Dominican Republic that further
stigmatized this option. In effect, antibodies from
the disastrous CIA coup against Diem, still in
Washington’s political bloodstream, reduce the
possibility of any similar move against Karzai today.
Ironically, those who seek to avoid the past may be
doomed to repeat it. By accepting Karzai’s massive
electoral fraud and refusing to consider alternatives
last August, Washington has, like it or not, put its
stamp of approval on his spreading corruption and the
political instability that accompanies it. In this
way, the Obama administration in its early days
invited a sad denouement to its Afghan adventure, one
potentially akin to Vietnam after Diem’s death.
America’s representatives in Kabul are once again
hurtling down history’s highway, eyes fixed on the
rear-view mirror, not the precipice that lies dead
ahead.
In the experiences of both Ngo Dinh Diem and Hamid
Karzai lurks a self-defeating pattern common to
Washington's alliances with dictators throughout the
Third World, then and now. Selected and often
installed in office by Washington, or at least backed
by massive American military aid, these client figures
become desperately dependent, even as they fail to
implement the sorts of reforms that might enable them
to build an independent political base. Torn between
pleasing their foreign patrons or their own people,
they wind up pleasing neither. As opposition to their
rule grows, a downward spiral of repression and
corruption often ends in collapse; while, for all its
power, Washington descends into frustration and
despair, unable to force its allies to adopt reforms
which might allow them to survive. Such a collapse is
a major crisis for the White House, but often --
Diem’s case is obviously an exception -- little more
than an airplane ride into exile for the local
autocrat or dictator.
There was -- and is -- a fundamental structural flaw
in any American alliance with these autocrats.
Inherent in these unequal alliances is a peculiar
dynamic that makes the eventual collapse of such
American-anointed leaders almost inevitable. At the
outset, Washington selects a client who seems pliant
enough to do its bidding. Such a client, in turn, opts
for Washington’s support not because he is strong, but
precisely because he needs foreign patronage to gain
and hold office.
Once installed, the client, no matter how reluctant,
has little choice but to make Washington’s demands his
top priority, investing his slender political
resources in placating foreign envoys. Responding to
an American political agenda on civil and military
matters, these autocrats often fail to devote
sufficient energy, attention, and resources to
cultivating a following; Diem found himself isolated
in his Saigon palace, while Karzai has become a
“president” justly, if derisively, nicknamed “the
mayor of Kabul.” Caught between the demands of a
powerful foreign patron and countervailing local needs
and desires, both leaders let guerrillas capture the
countryside, while struggling uncomfortably, and in
the end angrily, as well as resentfully, in the
foreign embrace.
Nor are such parallels limited to Afghanistan today or
Vietnam almost half a century ago. Since the end of
World War II, many of the sharpest crises in U.S.
foreign policy have arisen from just such problematic
relationships with authoritarian client regimes. As a
start, it was a similarly close relationship with
General Fulgencio Batista of Cuba in the 1950s which
inspired the Cuban revolution. That culminated, of
course, in Fidel Castro's rebels capturing the Cuban
capital, Havana, in 1959, which in turn led the
Kennedy administration into the catastrophic Bay of
Pigs invasion and then the Cuban Missile Crisis.
For a full quarter-century, the U.S. played
international patron to the Shah of Iran, intervening
to save his regime from the threat of democracy in the
early 1950s and later massively arming his police and
military while making him Washington’s proxy power in
the Persian Gulf. His fall in the Islamic revolution
of 1979 not only removed the cornerstone of American
power in this strategic region, but plunged Washington
into a succession of foreign policy confrontations
with Iran that have yet to end.
After a half-century as a similarly loyal client in
Central America, the regime of Nicaragua’s Anastasio
Somoza fell in the Sandinista revolution of 1979,
creating a foreign policy problem marked by the CIA's
contra operation against the new Sandinista government
and the seamy Iran-Contra scandal that roiled
President Reagan’s second term.
Just last week, Washington’s anointed autocrat in
Kyrgyzstan, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, fled the presidential
palace when his riot police, despite firing live
ammunition and killing more than 80 of his citizens,
failed to stop opposition protesters from taking
control of the capital, Bishkek. Although his rule was
brutal and corrupt, last year the Obama administration
courted Bakiyev sedulously and successfully to
preserve U.S. use of the old Soviet air base at Manas
critical for supply flights into Afghanistan. Even as
riot police were beating the opposition into
submission to prepare for Bakiyev’s “landslide
victory” in last July’s elections, President Obama
sent him a personal letter praising his support for
the Afghan war. With Washington’s imprimatur, there
was nothing to stop Bakiyev’s political slide into
murderous repression and his ultimate fall from power.
Why have so many American alliances with Third World
dictators collapsed in such a spectacular fashion,
producing divisive recriminations at home and policy
disasters abroad?
During Britain's century of dominion, its
self-confident servants of empire, from viceroys in
plumed hats to district officers in khaki shorts,
ruled much of Africa and Asia through an imperial
system of protectorates, indirect rule, and direct
colonial rule. In the succeeding American “half
century” of hegemony, Washington carried the burden of
global power without a formal colonial system,
substituting its military advisers for imperial
viceroys.
In this new landscape of sovereign states that emerged
after World War II, Washington has had to pursue a
contradictory policy as it dealt with the leaders of
nominally independent nations that were also deeply
dependent on foreign economic and military aid. After
identifying its own prestige with these fragile
regimes, Washington usually tries to coax, chide, or
threaten its allies into embracing what it considers
needed reforms. Even when this counsel fails and
prudence might dictate the start of a staged
withdrawal, as in Saigon in 1963 and Kabul today,
American envoys simply cannot let go of their
unrepentant, resentful allies, as the long slide into
disaster gains momentum.
With few choices between diplomatic niceties and a
destabilizing coup, Washington invariably ends up
defaulting to an inflexible foreign policy at the edge
of paralysis that often ends with the collapse of our
authoritarian allies, whether Diem in Saigon, the Shah
in Tehran, or on some dismal day yet to come, Hamid
Karzai in Kabul. To avoid this impending debacle, our
only realistic option in Afghanistan today may well be
the one we wish we had taken in Saigon back in August
1963 -- a staged withdrawal of U.S. forces.
-- Alfred W. McCoy is the J.R.W. Smail Professor of
History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is
the author of The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity
in the Global Drug Trade, which probes the conjuncture
of illicit narcotics and covert operations over the
past 50 years. His latest book, Policing America’s
Empire: The United States, the Philippines, and the
Rise of the Surveillance State, explores the influence
of overseas counterinsurgency operations on