At a pro-Palestine demonstration in Yemen in 2009. Chavez received
support for his intense anti-Israel stance. (Courtesy: Adeeb Qasem /
france24.com)
April
14, 2013
Some
opening vignettes might set the right tone for properly appreciating the
question of “who was right” about the so-called Arab Spring. (The notion of
there having been an “Arab Spring,” a term first coined by U.S.
neoconservatives such as Charles Krauthammer back in 2005, is
one that has been subject to radically diverse interpretations, from marking in
generic terms some sort of struggle for “freedom” and “democracy” [as if there
is only one kind of democracy], to views of a covertly directed process of U.S.
political intervention, and direct military intervention. Nonetheless, this
article is aimed at those who, even now, are still enchanted with the positive
aura of the Arab Spring idea.) As usual, my focus will be on Libya.
The Arab
Spring: It’s a Good Thing
Rejected:
Bernard-Henri Lévy. France’s Bernard-Henri Lévy, or BHL, who some claim is a
“philosopher,” was one of the loudest and most active proponents of Western
military intervention in Libya from the start, and served as a key adviser if
not a personal motivator to then French President Nicolas Sarkozy. We “saved Benghazi,”
he proclaimed.
Guess
who is now a persona non grata in the wonderfully new and free Libya
that he proudly boasted of aiding in its liberation? Why it’s BHL. He is no
longer welcome. Why? For being a Jew.
BHL picked a side without even pausing to take note that his “freedom fighters”
were painting Benghazi with graffiti depicting Gaddafi as being
a Jew (at least in part over some rumour that his grandmother
was Jewish), featuring him with the Star of David on his body. Among diplomats,
international aid workers, journalists and business travelers, “save Benghazi”
has now become “save yourself from Benghazi.” Who got the Arab Spring wrong?
Freedom, Democracy and Human Rights in the “New Libya.” How can we begin to describe Libya after it has been refreshed by the sweet breezes of the Arab Spring, after being liberated by a movement (or whatever) that no decent and right-minded person should ever dare to criticize?
Perhaps
we can refer to Libya’s religious freedom, with Egyptian Copts being detained and tortured.
This followed gunmen attacking an Egyptian Coptic
church in Benghazi. Or we could add some balance here, and
talk about the continual attacks against Libya’s Sufi Muslims.
There is even more good news, as Libyan women in schools face
threats and beatings. It’s not just Libyan women who have won
new respect, it is also these female British aid workers
who were abducted and raped.
Then
there is press freedom, such a central goal for anyone claiming to seek civil
liberties and freedom from dictatorship: “a large group of unidentified men
stormed the headquarters of Al-Assema TV, a private news channel in Tripoli,
and abducted four men, including the owner of the station Jumaa Al-Usta, the
former Executive Director Nabil Al-Shibani and journalists Mohammad Al-Houni
and Mahmoud Al-Sharkassi.”
In
the new Libya, persons displaced by war are fully respected as in the case of “serious and ongoing human rights violations against
inhabitants of the town of Tawergha, who are widely viewed as
having supported Muammar Gaddafi. The forced displacement of roughly 40,000
people, arbitrary detentions, torture, and killings are widespread, systematic,
and sufficiently organized to be crimes against humanity and should be
condemned by the United Nations Security Council.”
The
new Libya has apparently placed racist atrocity in the pantheon of “human
rights.” All those who wash their mouths with terms like “genocide prevention”
have apparently left the room. With a new Libya come new spelling conventions:
The correct way to spell “oppression” is now liberation.What part of this Arab Spring do you support?
“No shame and no gratitude in
lawless Libya.” The commentary in the Sunday Mail (2012/3/5) is especially caustic, in
ways that were previously reserved for speaking about Gaddafi, but now with
some remorse:
“The cemetery had remained inviolate through all the long years of enmity between Britain and the Gaddafi regime. But things are different in the new Libya.”
Then
the paper’s editors proceeded to draw several “uncomfortable conclusions” ~ again,
too late ~ such as:
“Libya after the fall of Gaddafi is a lawless and ungovernable place where horrible actions can be done with impunity by those who have enough guns. The second is that there is no gratitude among many of those we have helped. The third is that those who warned that we did not know ~ or care enough ~ who we were aiding have now been vindicated in the most spectacular and gruesome way… our leaders, and our media, should cease to be so simple-mindedly enthusiastic about endorsing every revolutionary movement that appears in the Arab world. Tyrants are bad, but their opponents are not necessarily any better.”Again, who was wrong about the Arab Spring?
Selfless
givers of freedom. The people on the “right side of history” (a Eurocentric
trope that refuses to go away wherever ignorance is near) have been found to
have engaged in humanitarian exploitation, or perhaps if you prefer commercial
humanism.
It turns out that the Canadian government of Stephen Harper “launched an all-out commercial offensive a full month before the 2011 war in Libya had ended to ensure ‘a return on our engagement and investment,’ newly released documents show.”
It turns out that the Canadian government of Stephen Harper “launched an all-out commercial offensive a full month before the 2011 war in Libya had ended to ensure ‘a return on our engagement and investment,’ newly released documents show.”
You may still be undecided about who got the Arab Spring right, but there is no doubt who eyed the Arab “cha-ching!“
With
just these few glimpses, one has to ask: how could it possibly be a source of
anything other than proud vindication to have been on the “wrong side” of the
Arab Spring? But there is a second assertion: that Hugo Chávez was not just on
the wrong side of the Arab Spring, but that he also lost support and
credibility because of it, and that he is resented for the positions he took.
Chávez “Lost
Support” Over the Arab Spring?
Arguments Against Evidence
In
reply to the last issue, a wide range of news media rushed to take the
opportunity of the death of Hugo Chávez to carelessly assert (or insert) that
despite any (or many) of his achievements, he will always be remembered as
having been wrong about the Arab Spring, thus leaving a bitter taste in the
mouths of “many people” in the Middle East.
Chávez’s Middle East reputation has thus been irreparably tarnished, resulting in a loss of supporters.
Let’s
glance at some examples:
Owen Jones, writing in Britain’s The Independent what
is otherwise a strong overview of Chávez’s many achievements, adds this
criticism:
“And then there is the matter of some of Chavez’s unpleasant foreign associations. Although his closest allies were his fellow democratically elected left-of-centre governments in Latin America ~ nearly all of whom passionately defended Chavez from foreign criticism ~ he also supported brutal dictators in Iran, Libya and Syria. It has certainly sullied his reputation.”
Leaving
aside the simplistic resort to calling people “brutal dictators,” in the style
of George W. Bush and his successor, producing the kind of meaningless
pop-polisci marking the flat world depicted by the mainstream media, Jones
should have answered a simple question. Chávez sullied his reputation among
which crowd? Jones may speak for you, but he does not speak for me, nor
does he speak for many others I know. Stating a subjective interpretation of
some, as if it were a universal and objective fact, is just sloppy reasoning.
Meanwhile,
France24 was completely convinced
beyond any doubt that Chávez “ended up tarnishing his
reputation in the region when the Arab Spring erupted in 2011,” for supporting
Gaddafi and Assad. After all, they have the word of one single source, a
political scientist in Paris. Journalism and evidence have apparently been through
an extremely ugly divorce ~ they refuse to just talk to each other in public
even as a mere formality.
Danny
Postel, Associate Director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the
University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies, complains in Salon
that there is not enough honesty in leftist appraisals of Chávez’s
record about the way that he coddled “tyrants.” Once more, he takes his own
interpretation as the sole one based in objective fact, and indeed, as
synonymous with fact. With reference to Libya, try to find where we see proof
that Chávez was wrong in backing Gaddafi:
He
spoke out emphatically in support of Muammar Qaddafi and Bashar Assad. Chávez
had been chummy with the Libyan leader before the 2011 uprising against him: in
2009 he regaled Qaddafi with a replica of Simón Bolívar’s sword and awarded him
the same ‘Order of the Liberator’ medal he’d bestowed on Ahmadinejad. “What
Símon Bolívar is to the Venezuelan people,” Chávez declared, “Qaddafi is to the
Libyan people.” As the Libyan revolt grew and Qaddafi went on a rampage of
slaughter, Chávez was one of a handful of world leaders who stood by him: “[W]e
do support the government of Libya.”
All
we read is that “Gaddafi went on a rampage of slaughter” ~ as if he was
fighting harmless children with their paper airplanes. Once again, absolute
silence on the issue of how those fought by Gaddafi were in many cases violent
Islamic reactionaries that had many times before engaged in violence against
his government, and that in even more cases the anti-Gaddafi opposition
targeted and murdered scores of innocent black Libyans and African migrant
workers during its so-called democratic uprising.
This
supposedly “critical” and “nuanced” left really needs to begin addressing its
own racist blind spots, if these writers from Europe and North America expect
to ever again be taken seriously in Latin America. Worse yet is when Postel
advances as evidence this example of absurd hyperbole,
that completely destroys any credibility he might have had ~ it was meant to be
evidence for the thesis that Chávez’s position has been politically costly and embarrassing
for his leftwing allies in governments across Latin America…and note that here
too not a grain of evidence is presented to support the claim. The reason is
simple: the claim is false.
However,
it is not just European and North American writers who write similar
accusations of Chávez. They might have been easier to ignore had they not been
joined by a thin elite of Middle Eastern writers who have added a patina of
“Arab legitimacy” to such denunciations.
Thus
writing for Al-Monitor, Ali Hashem states at the end of his
article:
“Prior to the Arab Spring, it was the pro-West liberalists who did not care for him. After the uprising, however, many of those who had chanted Chavez’s name changed their minds. His support for Gadhafi and Assad after they turned their weaponry on their people divided public opinion about him. Chavez viewed the uprisings as part of an imperialist plan to overthrow anti-American leaders in the region. Arab revolutionists accused him of ignoring the pain of those who had once admired him and invoked his name. To them, he became yet another arrogant leader who chose his interests and the tyrants’ over the peoples’.”
“Many.”
“Them.” “Divided public opinion.” Until the end of this paragraph, Hashem is
simply casting random insinuations without indicating which people, where, and
how many (and how he learns of this), really nothing about those who viewed
Chávez in these now disapproving terms. Even at the end, all we have is a vague
reference to “Arab revolutionists.” Given what these Arab revolutionists have
wrought in Libya ~ which is a very far cry from any socialist, democratic, and
independent republic, one has to ask: why should Chávez have even cared about
their opinion? Did he ever curry favour with Washington-supported reactionaries
and racists who overthrew one of the Arab World’s few secular and socialist
governments? One could imagine taking seriously that Chávez offended like-minded
supporters ~ but these were never among them to begin with.
Unsurprisingly, an article by Eman el-Shenawi in the newspaper of the Saudi monarchy, Al Arabiya, wrote with considerable yet unintended irony about Chávez’s support for Gaddafi (reducing analysis to named personalities and not issues). The same author should try writing some critical statements about how his Saudi employers are viewed in Bahrain, where the Saudis and other Gulf states actively and directly participated in the suppression of popular protests…part of an “Arab Spring” the Saudi-funded media pretend had never occurred.
Also
unsurprising is that another paper published by a despotic Gulf State, GulfNews and its writer Layelle Saad, can
assert that,“Many
Arabs lost respect for the Venezuelan leader after he backed despots during
Arab uprisings.” Saad, unlike even a pretend journalist, then concludes:
“Many Arabs have grown to detest the leader who began to see his double-standards on issues of humanitarian concern. It is doubtful his death will be mourned in the Arab world today.”
His
double-standards…unlike those of the Gulf Cooperation Council on Bahrain. The
“revolution” in Libya was an investment for the Gulf States ~ Chávez
represented a threat to their interests in acquiring control over Libya, and
they resent Chávez for that. I doubt their opinions would either surprise or
concern Chávez, they were never his friends or allies.
Marking
a transition toward more positive appraisals of Chávez in Middle Eastern
reporting, Albawaba in “Middle East pines for ‘Arab’ hero Chavez,”
drops in a line asserting:
“his backing of dictatorial leaders from Muammar Qaddafi of Libya, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Iran’s regime of Ayatollah saw his popularity dwindling during the Arab Spring.”
Yet
again, no evidence, no opinion polls or other surveys, nothing except that you
take this paper at its word. How does this writer know that Chávez’s popularity
was dwindling? It’s a quantitative statement–so quantify it.
In
the United Arab Emirates’ The National, Abdelhafid Ezzouitni compiled a
digest of opinions in the newspapers of the region.
Assuming that it is in any way a representative sample, the repudiation of Chávez’s support for Gaddafi and Assad and any suggestion that he lost the support of public opinion in the Middle East, is actually in the minority. Only one example offers a negative view of Chávez’s support for Gaddafi.
As
for losing support among allies, Global Post
instead notes that Chávez continued to receive the strong support from those
whose support he cultivated, such as the government of Syria. The Daily Star
of Lebanon again refers us to those in the region who actually supported
Chávez to begin with–which is the logical starting point for any argument
that Chávez had lost support among friends:
Palestinians
in Gaza and the West Bank were united in grief on Thursday over the death of
Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, whose untiring support for their cause saw him make
blistering attacks on Israel. The 58-year-old Venezuelan president, who died on
Tuesday after a nearly two-year struggle with cancer, was hugely popular with
the Palestinians for his outspoken support for their plight. “This is a great
loss for us,” president Mahmud Abbas said during a condolence call to the
Venezuelan representative’s office in Ramallah.
NBC News reported that in Iran support for Chávez also continued past
his death, and past the “Arab Spring.”
When
it comes to searching for any actual evidence on which opinions are ideally
based, one finds little or nothing to support the claim that Chávez “lost
support” in the Middle East for his refusal to jump on the humanitarian
interventionist bandwagon, spearheaded by NATO and the U.S. State Department.
After all, he cannot have lost any support that he did not have to begin with.
Chávez’s
Anti-Imperialist Knowledge
In
anthropology, when students are trained in fieldwork methods, and what we read
about doing ethnographic field research, special emphasis is placed on key
informants: those with advanced and accumulated knowledge of their own
culture and who can thus serve as valuable guides for outsiders seeking a
deeper understanding of their culture. Typically such key informants would be
elders, chiefs, shamans, and so forth.
In
the Latin American context, some leaders have acquired advanced and accumulated
knowledge of U.S. imperialism, both through time spent in (in)direct
confrontation with it, and through personal experience. This is the case of
Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, who in the 1980s led the Sandinista government as
it fought off CIA-funded counterrevolutionaries and had to deal with various
CIA and other U.S. plots, such as the mining of Nicaragua’s harbours and
backing local media and opposition groups. Daniel Ortega leads Nicaragua once
again, and stood firmly in support of the government of Muammar Gaddafi. Ortega
knows something about how U.S. imperialism works.
Cuba’s
Fidel Castro is a survivor, on many levels. Fidel survived over 600 foreign
assassination attempts, including some outlandish CIA plots that had they not
been confirmed would have made anyone referring to them seem like a mad
conspiracy theorist. Cuba was invaded by forces backed by the U.S. under John
F. Kennedy, and has endured decades of destabilization attempts. If Fidel is an
expert on anything, and he is an expert on a great deal, it is U.S. imperialism
and how it works. Both Ortega and Castro denounced intervention in Libya,
showed no foolish enchantment with Gaddafi’s opposition, and indicated their
support for the government of Libya.
Thus
we come to Hugo Chávez too, long demonized by Washington, surviving a coup that
was backed by the U.S., and presiding over a Venezuela that saw the U.S.
Embassy actively involved in political intervention.
As
just one example among many, one U.S. Embassy cable detailed its
plans (and actual steps taken) in U.S. covert intervention in Venezuela,
including these aims:
“1) Strengthening Democratic Institutions,2) Penetrating Chavez’ Political Base,3) Dividing Chavismo,4) Protecting Vital US business, and5) Isolating Chavez internationally.”
Some
of the key U.S. agencies pursuing these aims were USAID’s Office of Transition
Initiatives, and so-called NGOs such as Development Alternatives
International (DAI), Freedom House, and CIVICUS. After witnessing what was done
in Venezuela, it was only reasonable ~ and proven to be quite justified ~ for
Chávez to be more than sceptical of “spontaneous” street protests that received
the immediate support of Western powers who themselves threaten almost instant
military intervention.
Like
many other conscious Latin Americans, students of Latin America’s history since
independence from Spain, Hugo Chávez was well acquainted with the nearly 200
years of U.S. intervention in the affairs of Latin American states, and is much
better positioned to speak on these issues with considerably more expertise
than many of his Middle Eastern counterparts, or some North American or
European commentators whose main claim to fame is that they have a blog.
Unfortunately, when it comes to U.S. imperialism, a great many critical Latin
Americans know exactly what they are talking about, as much as Al Jazeera and
Al Arabiya may wish to pretend otherwise.
The
point is that individuals such as Chávez were well “trained” to recognize patterns,
to piece together different bits of information, to critically scrutinize
events on the ground in the context of past actions and proclamations, and to
place seemingly random events into a coherent picture.
In the case of Libya, Chávez was correct that the U.S. sought the first opportunity to intervene militarily, and he rightly opposed that, and was consistent about it from the start. Chavez was correct even when those who ought to have known better asserted that the U.S. was not going to intervene in Libya.
Chávez
made his principles and objectives very clear from the start and throughout his
tours of North Africa and the Middle East: that Venezuela would not stand for
the continued intervention of U.S. imperialism, that it would instead stand by
those targeted by it, and that it would do what it could to support the
Palestinian cause, and that it would seek to build an alternative alliance of
nations that stood for long-valued principles of self-determination,
non-intervention in state’s internal affairs, and the quest for social and
economic justice.
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About the
author:
Maximilian C. Forte is a professor of anthropology in Montreal, Canada. He teaches courses in the field of political anthropology dealing with “the new imperialism,” Indigenous resistance movements and philosophies, theories and histories of colonialism, and critiques of the mass media. Max is a founding member of Anthropologists for Justice and Peace. Visit him online at http://openanthropology.org/
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