Strange
Liberators: Militarism, Mayhem, and the Pursuit of Profit
By Gregory Elich
ISBN:1595265708
Paperback:
Llumina Press (May 1, 2006)
In the era of �humanitarian imperialism� the discourse of
the ruling class has unfortunately had a �trickle down� effect on far too many
of those who ought to know better. Rather than moralizing about the form
painted onto a people by the imperialist media looking to subjugate small
nations, Gregory Elich does a deeply researched and personally encountered
accounting of imperialism�s misdeeds in the places where the saturation of vile
propaganda has been the most thorough.
In seven chapters on Yugoslavia, four on north Korea and
four more on Zimbabwe, Elich, regardless of his own affiliations or
allegiances, has provided us all with �the other side� of the story in these
beleaguered nations, only two of which still exist.
Despite the drumbeat of propaganda against all of these
republics, Elich reminds us that each of these states emerged not from the womb
of nations, but revolutionary struggles against some of the most anti-human
forces of the 20th Century. In north Korea, the Japanese and then the American
forces had attempted to maintain all of Korea as a colony, burning the northern
half of the nation in a manner that made even the Vietnamese struggle seem
almost a walk in the park, with every north of 38 town being obliterated as
policy, leaving mere dust and mud for the Korean Workers Party to try and
rebuild.
Reminding us of that backdrop, the �dispute� that was begun
during the Clinton era is followed through with the holes -- and there are
literally dozens covered by Elich -- filled in to give a more complete story.
Despite the general backdrop of the mainstream media -- that the North Koreans
have violated their 1994 �deal� with the United States (The Agreed Framework)
-- Elich demonstrates the actual list of events: The signing of the Jimmy
Carter brokered AF saw every single one of the terms of US obligation violated
from the start save for one -- the delivery of heavy fuel oil. Others ignored
included opening up or removing any barriers to trade and investment on the
part of the US, a promise from the US that nuclear weapons would not get used
against the Democratic People�s Republic of Korea (DPRK) and assistance in the
construction of a light water reactor to help the DPRK overcome their reliance
on the outside world for energy. To quote Elich directly, �By the time the US
halted deliveries of heavy fuel oil, thereby abandoning the only provision it
had not yet violated, North Korea was still honoring the agreement in full.�
Elich�s book is very well timed, as it is placed to show the
�threat� of a nuclear attack is very real -- but against the already suffering
North Korea, while the US blockade continues to starve the people.
In Yugoslavia, the resistance in WWII established the
Socialist Republic that emerged from the ashes of the Nazi-supported and
inspired Croatian Ustashe. By the time that the USSR was overthrown, the anti-Soviet
Yugoslavia had out lived its usefulness to imperialism. Through many deliberate
provocations, multi-ethnic Yugoslavia was to be reduced to fratricidal
mono-ethnic states incapable of charting independent courses from Europe or the
US. Elich shows the propaganda techniques used, the victims of NATO bombings
and the �other side� of the stories involved in the Yugoslav vs. Yugoslav
conflicts.
When you are trying to sell the destruction of a multi-ethnic
state to a population in North America, you will need a simple script of good
guys vs. bad guys. The worst offenders become �freedom fighters�; those who
oppose imperialism become �Stalinists� or �nationalists.� Irony or deliberate
Orwellian spin that the Croatian Democratic Union -- the political movement
that openly embraced the insignia, songs and in many cases, practices of a
genocidal fascist movement -- is one that found �freedom and democracy�? Is it
accidental that the Kosovar movement of Albanian settlers (under the rubric of
the KLA/UCK) who have expelled nearly every Jew, Gorani, Hungarian, Croat,
Bosnian, Serb and even �suspect� Albanian gets to be a force for good, whereas
the rump Yugoslav Republic led by elected socialists and with 24 multi-ethnic
communities gets demonized as racist and fascist? Strange Liberators indeed.
Elich traveled across Serbia after NATO bombs had fallen
across the territory, gathering so much in terms of direct contact as to truly
humanize the enemy in chapters 9-14. However, the two chapters that are perhaps
the greatest in contribution are the last two of his Yugoslav sojourn. �Secret
War� details the covert operation to achieve what had failed otherwise: the
overthrow of the only remaining government in Europe to lead an overwhelmingly
public sector economy.
Also fascinating (in the manner of a car crash) is chapter
15: �Prison Camp Lora and the Trial of the Lora 8.� It details not only the
horror of existence for the prisoners held there, but the horror of duplicity
in Croatia�s �legal� system (�trials� were carried out in the �free� Croatia)
and the silence of acceptance from European and North American news sources
while mass murderers were exonerated. Many writers, from introduction writer
Michael Parenti to former Canadian military head Lewis Mackenzie, have been invaluable
in telling us that Serbians were not all to blame for the division of
Yugoslavia, and that they (as a nation and government) had been systematically
smeared. The other �other� side of the machination of the destruction of
Yugoslavia is in showing who the �democrats� truly were, and how they treated
their opponents. Explaining matters such as �Operation Storm� -- the single
largest act of ethnic cleansing (of Serbs by Croats) in any of the wars in
Yugoslavia -- is one thing. Elich gets into the details of the Lora camp, and
helps us see who has done the most for the revival of fascism in Europe, with
Ustashe-era practices at this concentration and death camp, followed by the
fake �trials� of the perpetrators.
And in Zimbabwe, where Apartheid flourished in Cecil Rhodes
prior namesake, a revolution took place in a country where one percent (the
white population) owned over 70 percent of the land. That revolution initially
refused to carry out the returning of farmlands to indigenous Zimbabweans.
Trying to avoid the pariah state perhaps, Zimbabwe didn�t renounce the plan to
leave whites in control of virtually the entire economy and Mugabe was hailed
as a model leader for Africa.
While still treated as a �democracy,� Zimbabwe allowed the
IMF to implement a program called the Economic Structural Adjustment Program,
or ESAP. For approximately a decade, Zimbabwe struggled to simultaneously
please investors and feed the population of an agricultural third world
economy. That ultimately proved impossible (as it always does) with the IMF
cutting further funding in 1995, due to a lack of budget cutting and government
employee sacking.
According to Elich, in September 2001, the IMF declared that
�Zimbabwe [was] ineligible to use the general resources of the IMF, and removed
Zimbabwe from the list of countries eligible to borrow resources under the
Poverty and Growth Facility,� for refusing to go through yet further austerity
programs -- one supported by the �human rights� opposition Movement for a
Democratic Change (MDC). With the ESAP program becoming more unsustainable, in
October of 2001, Robert Mugabe and ZANU-PF announced �ESAP is no more.� By
December later that year, the United States passed the �Zimbabwe Democracy and
Economic Recovery Act.�
Zimbabwe decided it had enough of Western lectures about
this or that facet of their economy, when starvation seemed to be the only
�solution� that was acceptable to the West. A land reform program was taken up,
and Western howling about Mugabe and ZANU-PF began. Much has been made about
the inflation and the chaos that have accompanied the redistribution of land;
Elich makes a case for environmental exacerbation of the situation (climate
change leading to massive drought) and also argues that no land reform program
this thorough has ever seen productivity not take a temporary hit.
Elich does not reduce his contribution to the
anti-imperialist struggle to simply putting plusses where the imperialists
place a minus; This book tackles some of the basic propaganda terminology of
the �War on Terror,� including a fascinating (and heartbreaking) chapter
detailing the archaeological plunder of Iraq�s antiquities. A mock quiz on the
construction of human rights from an imperial perspective is included, as is a
much needed chapter on the ultimate threat to humanity -- unchecked climate
change.
If there are major weaknesses in this book, it is questions
unasked: What should we make of Robert Mugabe�s outrageous homophobic rants in
international meetings over the last few years? How does peak oil play into the
threat of climate change and the lack of initiative to tackle it? These are but
two, but any book -- even one this complete -- is going to be unable to answer
many questions. The Achilles Heel of this production is the lack of answers to
the questions that progressives may ask.
If the reader comes to this timely book believing much of
the stories about Western good intentions or �rogue state� nefariousness, it
will be a bitter pill to swallow as these chapters are each backed up with a
tremendous wealth of citations from reputable news outlets, including primarily
�statements against interest.� Yet even if the reader is one who already is
critical or suspicious of imperialism, the wealth of new information will open
eyes yet further -- and even challenge many perceptions already held. Simply
put, this is a book not to be missed, and to be lent to all who will read it.
Macdonald
Stainsby is a freelance writer and social justice activist living Canada. He
can be reached at mstainsby@resist.ca.