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Questionable conquests: ‘Liberal world order’ was built with blood

If you read the commentary coming out of New York and Washington, or speak with elites in Western Europe, it’s easy to find people panicking about the loss of “American leadership.” From Joe Biden’s campaign pledges to trans-Atlantic think tanks, exhortations to revive American supremacy and contain China are everywhere.

Questionable conquests: ‘Liberal world order’ was built with blood
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Vincent Bevins

Chennai

They have reason to be worried: This moment is shaking the foundations of America’s hegemony. It is painfully clear that the United States is ill-equipped to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, which does not play to American strengths (we can’t shoot it, after all). President Trump has for years been dismissing allies and antagonising international institutions. And China is seemingly laying the groundwork for its arrival as a great power. American officials are now talking openly about a “new Cold War” to confront Beijing, and China now seems such a threat that Hal Brands of the American Enterprise Institute wonders whether the US should get back in the business of covertly toppling unfriendly governments.

It’s unsurprising that establishment pundits, American policymakers and their allies would be alarmed about American decline. The US and Western Europe have been the winners of the process that created this globalised world, the main beneficiaries of Washington’s triumph at the end of the Cold War. But a lot of people feel very differently. In early April, I received a message from Winarso, a man I know in Indonesia who runs an organisation that cares for the survivors of the mass murder that took place there in the 1960s. He was trying to raise money to buy rice so his community wouldn’t starve under lockdown. A dollar still goes a very long way in Indonesia, as Winarso knows too well. To explain US’ economic and political power, he points to the Cold War. It’s easy to see Washington was victorious in the 20th century, he told me, because “we all got the US-centred version of capitalism that Washington wanted to spread.” I asked him how America won. He answered. “You killed us.”

I have spent the last three years with the losers of that great game, the individuals whose lives were shattered so this global order could be constructed. I spent most of my time interviewing victims and survivors of a loose network of mass murder programmes that targeted civilian opponents of Washington’s Cold War allies. I got to know people on four continents who lived through the coups and CIA plots that Brands is talking about. To understand the nature of US power — and its future — their experiences are as important as those of anyone in a Paris boardroom or Washington think tank. Winarso’s country is the most significant example. In 1965 and 1966, the US government assisted in the murder of approximately 1 mn Indonesian civilians. This was one of the turning points of the Cold War — Indonesia is the world’s fourth most populous country, and policymakers at the time understood it was a far more valuable prize than Vietnam. But it’s largely forgotten in the English-speaking world precisely because it was such a success. No American soldiers died; little attention was drawn to one more country pulled, seemingly naturally, into the US’ orbit.

But the process was not natural. The US-backed military used a failed uprising as a pretext to crush the Indonesian left, whose influence Washington had been seeking to counter for a decade, and then took control of the country. Declassified State Department documents make it clear that the US aided and abetted the mass murder in Indonesia, providing material support, encouraging the killings and rewarding the perpetrators.

It was not the first time the US had done something like this. In 1954, the American ambassador to Guatemala reportedly handed kill lists to that country’s military. And in Iraq, in 1963, the CIA provided lists of suspected communists and leftists to the ruling Baath Party.

Indonesia in 1965 was the apex of anti-Communist violence in the 20th century. The slaughter obliterated the popular, unarmed Partai Komunis Indonesia, the largest Communist party outside of China and the Soviet Union, and toppled President Sukarno, a founding leader of the Nonaligned Movement and an outspoken anti-imperialist, replacing him with General Suharto, a right-wing dictator who quickly became one of Washington’s most important Cold War allies.

This was such a victory for the global anti-Communist movement that far-right groups around the world began to draw inspiration from the “Jakarta” model and build copycat programmes. They were assisted by US officials and anti-Communist organisations that moved across borders. In turn, leftist movements radicalised or took up arms, believing they would be killed if they attempted to pursue the path of democratic socialism. In the early ’70s, right-wing terrorists in Chile painted “Jakarta” on the houses of socialists, threatening that they too would be killed. After the CIA-backed coup in 1973, they were. Brazilian leftists were threatened with “Operacao Jacarta,” too. By the end of the 1970s, most of South America was governed by authoritarian, pro-American governments that secured power by mass murder. By 1990, death squads in Central America pushed the Latin American death toll into the hundreds of thousands.

In North America and Europe, if people think about these terror campaigns at all, the narrative is too often that the US made alliances with unsavoury characters, who committed unfortunate abuses. That is wrong. The US government was behind much of the violence, and it was far from inconsequential. Most nations in the former third world were set on their current path by conflicts that took place during the Cold War. The violence made possible a version of crony capitalism that comprises daily reality for billions, and it is an integral part of the version of globalisation the world ended up with.

No reasonable person denies the great things the US did in the 20th century, or that many countries enjoyed prosperity while in happy alliances with Washington. But as we move deeper into the 21st century, Americans are going to need to confront the darker side of US hegemony — because much of the rest of the world already has. Part of the reason the current order is so fragile is because so many around the world know, indeed can physically feel in their bodies, that Washington used brutality to construct it. We do not know yet what the world would look like were China to take up the position the US is losing. There is no reason to believe just because this world order has blood in its roots, something better will spring to life if it dies. As Americans reckon with — and fret about — their country’s diminished position in the world, we need to understand that the United States is not, in fact, beloved as a beacon of freedom, democracy and human rights. From Argentina to the Democratic Republic of Congo, East Timor to Iran, millions of people are sceptical of Washington’s intentions, even if they have no particular desire to emulate China’s government, either.

A failure to recognise reality, however, and a desperate attempt to claw back a deeply imperfect global order, could be very dangerous for everyone.

— Vincent Bevins is a journalist and the author of The Jakarta Method. NYT© 2020

The New York Times

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