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26 January 2011 By Reason Wafawarova AFTER the late President Samuel Doe of Liberia
"brazenly stole" the 1985 election, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf,
who is now the president of that country; had this to
say: "At the time, an American official told me
bluntly, Our strategic interests are more important
than democracy'." This flagitious Washington tradition is what seems
to elude the overly zealous civic activists that
herald the White House as the headquarters of
democracy. A lot of the youths in Africa today are addicted to
this hoopla about the glorious exultations offered at
the altar of American democracy so crazed about this
fantastic system that produced the vaingloriously
idolised Barrack Obama, a man whose half black
component has been elevated to double blackness and to
the super testimony of African achievement. While criticising Barrack Obama is to some like
shooting an angel in the heart, the reality of the
matter is that Barrack Obama is no result of
democracy, but a creation of American strategic
interests an employee of George Soros and others
from his camp of corporate owners. The United States has no tradition of being
motivated by democratic values and we will have to
look at history in brief to understand this point
better. The scene in Africa in the seventies and the
eighties was quite awful.The catastrophe included
apartheid South Africa's military aggression in
Southern Africa. A study by the UN Economic Commission for Africa
estimated that "South Africa's military aggression and
destabilisation of its neighbours cost the region
US$10 billion in 1988 and over US$60 billion and 1,5
million lives in the first nine years of this decade". The United States undertook "quiet diplomacy"
something they furiously accuse independent South
Africa of doing in Pretoria's perceived failure to
carry out Washington's bidding on Zanu-PF and Robert
Mugabe in Zimbabwe. The US never undertook quiet diplomacy when Saddam
Hussein invaded Kuwait, not when Morris Bishop
declared people-centred policies in Grenada. For apartheid South Africa, the US recognised the
concerns of a primitively racist regime and the
domestic and foreign business interests it fostered. The US Congress imposed sanctions on South Africa
in 1986 over Ronald Reagan's veto, but the impact of
those sanctions was sharply limited. As noted by Noam Chomsky in the book "Deterring
Democracy"; the American Committee on Africa reported
that only 25 percent of US-South Africa trade was
affected, and that iron, steel, and (until late 1989)
half finished uranium continued to be imported from
South Africa. When one compares these sanctions to the mass
killing embargo placed on Nicaragua by Ronald Reagan
on May 1, 1985, or to the 50-year-old deadly sanctions
regime on Cuba, or more recently to the ruinous and
murderous illegal sanctions imposed by the EU, the US
and other Western allies on Zimbabwe the contrast
shouts a lot of obscenities. After the sanctions were put in place US exports to
South Africa increased from US$1,28 billion in 1987 to
US$1,71 billion in 1989, according to the US Commerce
Department. This was considered a vast improvement compared to
the US reaction to the UN-imposed sanctions on
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), a reaction which impelled the
US Congress to pass the Byrd Amendment authorising the
importation of Rhodesian chrome from 1971 to 1977. Stephen Shalom observed: "Many nations had covertly
been violating the sanctions, but the US became one of
three UN members the others were (fascist) Portugal
and South Africa to officially violate the
(Rhodesia) sanctions." Despite the rants and rhetoric from surviving
Rhodesians, Ian Smith was no economic genius with the
ability to bust sanctions and "grow the economy
regardless". Smith was merely a beneficiary of the
acts of a bunch of racist law- breakers who were
blatantly violating international law to prop up one
of their own. Even Britain had a soft spot for Smith.They too
continued to import Rhodesia's chrome. Under the current illegally-imposed sanctions
regime on Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe has no covert
backers helping him to keep his head above the waters,
and this is why the last decade has been phenomenally
ruinous for the Zimbabwean economy in general and for
the agricultural sector in particular. The only
realistic way to fight back is for Zanu-PF and Mugabe
to hit directly at specific economic interests of
Western countries in Zimbabwe, and this writer can
safely predict that 2011 will bring in a lot of such
counter-attacks. The sole reason the illegal sanctions are in place
is to stall the popular land reclamation programme
that ousted white commercial farmers who used to
occupy 75 percent of the arable land in Zimbabwe prior
to 2000. The truth of the matter is that reversal of the
land reclamation exercise is simply unenforceable
absolutely unachievable from however many angles one
may want to try. Not even the determinations and
verdicts reached by foreign courts over land reclaimed
from ex-colonialists will make any difference. Not a
single white farmer will ever be allowed to track back
to colonial occupation of stolen land. In fact, so impossible is this task that even
President Robert Mugabe himself cannot enforce such a
reversal there is just no way anymore. The land is
with the people and no politicking can take it back to
captivity. Zimbabwe's arable land is now a liberated
zone. During the Cold War, the disasters of Africa were
commonly attributed to "socialism", a term then used
freely to apply to anything Washington did not like. But there was an exception, described well by Noam
Chomsky when he quoted Howard Witt of the conservative
Chicago Tribune saying, "an island of freewheeling
capitalism in a sea of one-party socialist states". He was referring to Liberia, which like the
Philippines, could attribute its happy state to
American leadership. Witt said Liberia was "America's
only toehold on the African continent" in this case
for a century and a half. Liberia today takes special significance in the US'
self-anointed mission to democratise Africa, and
similar significance was assumed by Liberia during the
Cold War era, particularly after President Samuel Doe,
"a brutish, nearly illiterate army sergeant . . .
seized power in 1980 after disembowelling the previous
president in bed", as described by Witt. Doe proceeded to elevate his fellow tribesmen, who
made up only 4 percent of the population, and he went
on to persecute and savagely oppress the rest of the
population. The US looked the other way with a grin
and a wink. Clearly, the Reagan Administration was more than
impressed and it happily determined to turn Liberia,
like Jamaica, into a showcase of capitalism and
democracy. In the first six years of Doe's regime, Washington
poured massive military and economic aid into "the
backward country", arrogantly ignoring mounting
evidence that Doe and his ministers were stealing much
of the money. Then was the election that was stolen by Samuel Doe
in 1985 all with Washington's approval. This was a
replica of the Noriega story where the US had created
and endorsed a similar election in Panama a year
earlier. It is this election that was protested by the then
dissident, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, as earlier quoted in
the opening remarks of this piece. Witt noted that the results of US aid were quite
evident. He wrote: "The soldiers of President Samuel
Doe's army wear uniforms of American GIs as they go
about their business murdering Liberian civilians on
the streets of the capital, Monrovia." The city was named after President James Monroe of
the United States and Witt added, "the bodies of many
of the civilian victims are dumped in the morgue at
the American-built John F. Kennedy Hospital", where
"combat-hardened doctors" said "they had never
witnessed such brutality". Monrovia became a death trap and those who were not
struck by starvation, cholera or typhoid tried to
escape the army or the rebel forces under Charles
Taylor, a former Doe aide or later, those under the
command of a breakaway unit led by Prince Johnson. The results of US aid became even more apparent
when reporters entered Monrovia with the African
peacekeeping forces after Doe was tortured and
murdered by Johnson's rebel soldiers. What they discovered was "a bloody legacy" of "10
years in power" by the US favourite African leader
then. He also wrote about "a large meeting hall for women
and children (where) clothes clung to the skeletons of
female and underaged victims". Of course, it is not everyone who suffered in this
US-created "island of freewheeling capitalism". The oligarchy of freed American slaves and their
descendants oppressed and exploited the indigenous
population for a century and a half, much the same way
Israelis persecute and torment the people of Palestine
each passing day. The irony of victims of oppression and brutality
turning out to be absolute monsters themselves is a
tragedy that has never been explained. Of course, the US will always look the other way.
So Doe did quite well for himself until his turn to be
discarded came. Chomsky then noted that US corporations Firestone
and B. F. Goodrich merely benefited without facing any
unpleasant fate, proving that freewheeling capitalism
does have its own virtues. To cap it all, the US built a massive Voice of
America transmitter in Liberia, like the one they
recently built in Botswana, perhaps to respectively
broadcast the good news of Doe's wondrous
achievements, and for Botswana to beam across the
Zimbabwean border rigorous lectures on American
democracy and freedoms. This short history of Africa provides for
Zimbabweans very incisive lessons, not least the idea
that any sane citizen must not have anything to do
with such a patronising monster feeding on the blood
of innocent nationals from other countries. MDC-T must
be disowned by every right-thinking citizen for
fronting the will of Westerners in Zimbabwe. The choice is a deadly one as Zimbabweans have seen
over the last 10 years of mass killing illegal
sanctions. Zimbabwe is not ready for a democracy founded on
the deaths of so many of its people buried today as
victims of the ruinous Western sanctions, including
those who faced death in hospitals hit hard by the
sanctions regime in the last 10 years. Zimbabweans are not about to reward those who
worked hand in glove with the US in suffering our
people to the graves. This is why MDC-T is a concern to many Zimbabweans.
It is a party following Doe's lead in marching
according to Washington's instructions. Of course, the US strategic interests in the
mineral wealth of Zimbabwe are way more important than
matters of democracy. The rhetoric about MDC-T bringing "change" to
Zimbabwe is infuriating as it is unconvincing. Zimbabwe we are one and together we will
overcome. It is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer and can
be contacted on
wafawarova@yahoo.co.uk or reason@rwafawa rova.com
or visit
www.rwafawarova.com |