This
article cuts through all the hypocrisy of world leaders who have
transformed Mandela from a fighter for national liberation into saint
The
hijacking of Mandela's legacy
Pepe Escobar
8
December, 2013
Beware
of strangers bearing gifts. The “gift” is the ongoing, frantic
canonization of Nelson Mandela. The “strangers” are the 0.0001
percent, that fraction of the global elite that’s really in control
(media naturally included).
It’s
a Tower of Babel of tributes piled up in layer upon layer of
hypocrisy – from the US to Israel and from France to Britain.
What
must absolutely be buried under the tower is that the apartheid
regime in South Africa was sponsored and avidly defended by the West
until, literally, it was about to crumble under the weight of its own
contradictions. The only thing that had really mattered was South
Africa’s capitalist economy and immense resources, and the role of
Pretoria in fighting “communism.”
Apartheid was, at best, a nuisance.
Mandela
is being allowed sainthood by the 0.0001% because he extended a hand
to the white oppressor who kept him in jail for 27 years. And because
he accepted – in the name of “national
reconciliation”
– that no apartheid killers would be tried, unlike the Nazis.
Among
the cataracts of emotional tributes and the crass marketization of
the icon, there’s barely a peep in Western corporate media about
Mandela’s firm refusal to ditch armed struggle against apartheid
(if he had done so, he would not have been jailed for 27 years); his
gratitude towards Fidel Castro’s Cuba – which always supported
the people of Angola, Namibia and South Africa fighting apartheid;
and his perennial support for the liberation struggle in Palestine.
Young
generations, especially, must not be made aware that during the Cold
War, any organization fighting for the freedom of the oppressed in
the developing world was dubbed “terrorist”;
that was the Cold War version of the “war
on terror”.
Only at the end of the 20th century was the fight against apartheid
accepted as a supreme moral cause; and Mandela, of course, rightfully
became the universal face of the cause.
It’s
easy to forget that conservative messiah Ronald Reagan – who
enthusiastically hailed the precursors of al-Qaeda as “freedom
fighters”
– fiercely opposed the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act because,
what else, the African National Congress (ANC) was considered a
“terrorist organization”
(on top of Washington branding the ANC as “communists”).
The
same applied to a then-Republican Congressman from Wyoming who later
would turn into a Darth Vader replicant, Dick Cheney. As for Israel,
it even offered one of its nuclear weapons to the Afrikaners in
Pretoria – presumably to wipe assorted African commies off the map.
In
his notorious 1990 visit to the US, now as a free man, Mandela duly
praised Fidel, PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and Col. Gaddafi as his
“comrades in arms”:
“There is no reason
whatsoever why we should have any hesitation about hailing their
commitment to human rights.”
Washington/Wall Street was livid.
And
this was Mandela’s take, in early 2003, on the by then inevitable
invasion of Iraq and the wider war on terror; “If
there is a country that has committed unspeakable atrocities in the
world, it is the United States of America.”
No wonder he was kept on the US government terrorist list until as
late as 2008.
From
terrorism to sainthood
In
the early 1960s – when, by the way, the US itself was practicing
apartheid in the South - it would be hard to predict to what extent
“Madiba” (his clan name), the dandy lawyer and lover of boxing
with an authoritarian character streak, would adopt Gandhi’s
non-violence strategy to end up forging an exceptional destiny
graphically embodying the political will to transform society. Yet
the seeds of “Invictus”
were already there.
The
fascinating complexity of Mandela is that he was essentially a
democratic socialist. Certainly not a capitalist. And not a pacifist
either; on the contrary, he would accept violence as a means to an
end. In his books and countless speeches, he always admitted his
flaws. His soul must be smirking now at all the adulation.
Arguably,
without Mandela, Barack Obama would never have reached the White
House; he admitted on the record that his first political act was at
an anti-apartheid demonstration. But let’s make it clear: Mr.
Obama, you’re no Nelson Mandela.
To
summarize an extremely complex process, in the “death
throes”
of apartheid, the regime was mired in massive corruption, hardcore
military spending and with the townships about to explode. Mix
Fidel’s Cuban fighters kicking the butt of South Africans
(supported by the US) in Angola and Namibia with the inability to
even repay Western loans, and you have a recipe for bankruptcy.
The
best and the brightest in the revolutionary struggle – like Mandela
– were either in jail, in exile, assassinated (like Steve Biko) or
“disappeared”, Latin American death squad-style. The actual
freedom struggle was mostly outside South Africa – in Angola,
Namibia and the newly liberated Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
Once
again, make no mistake; without Cuba – as Mandela amply stressed
writing from jail in March 1988 – there would be “no
liberation of our continent, and my people, from the scourge of
apartheid”.
Now get one of those 0.0001% to admit it.
In
spite of the debacle the regime – supported by the West – sensed
an opening. Why not negotiate with a man who had been isolated from
the outside world since 1962? No more waves and waves of Third World
liberation struggles; Africa was now mired in war, and all sorts of
socialist revolutions had been smashed, from Che Guevara killed in
Bolivia in 1967 to Allende killed in the 1973 coup in Chile.
Mandela
had to catch up with all this and also come to grips with the fall of
the Berlin Wall and the end of what European intellectuals called
“real socialism.”
And then he would need to try to prevent a civil war and the total
economic collapse of South Africa.
The
apartheid regime was wily enough to secure control of the Central
Bank – with crucial IMF help – and South Africa’s trade policy.
Mandela secured only a (very significant) political victory. The ANC
only found out it had been conned when it took power. Forget about
its socialist idea of nationalizing the mining and banking industries
– owned by Western capital, and distribute the benefits to the
indigenous population. The West would never allow it. And to make
matters worse, the ANC was literally hijacked by a sorry, greedy
bunch.
Follow
the roadmap
And
Ronnie Kasrils does a courageous mea culpa dissecting how Mandela and
the ANC accepted a devil’s
pact
with the usual suspects.
The
bottom line: Mandela defeated apartheid but was defeated by
neoliberalism. And that’s the dirty secret of him being allowed
sainthood.
Now
for the future. Cameroonian Achille Mbembe, historian and political
science professor, is one of Africa’s foremost intellectuals. In
his book Critique
of Black Reason,
recently published in France (not yet in English), Mbembe praises
Mandela and stresses that Africans must imperatively invent new forms
of leadership, the essential precondition to lift themselves in the
world. All-too-human “Madiba”
has provided the roadmap. May Africa unleash one, two, a thousand
Mandelas
Pepe
Escobar is the roving correspondent for Asia Times/Hong Kong, an
analyst for RT and TomDispatch, and a frequent contributor to
websites and radio shows ranging from the US to East Asia.
From Real News
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