August 20/21, 2023 -
Information Clearing House -
Mark Twain said history never repeats
itself but often rhymes.
In the 19th century era of voracious,
predatory colonialism, King Leopold II of
Belgium appropriated a vast African area he
called The Congo Free State. With icy
indifference to human suffering and horrific
cruelty, he ran a slave domain there,
maiming and killing natives and looting its
ivory and rubber for his enrichment.
Though excessively vicious, his gross
inhumanity was ignored by Europe because
most of its empires were engaged in the same
murderous exploitation of Africa by violent
conquest. Colonies, covering most of the
continent, were run as possessions, mere
sources of wealth, without regard for
indigenous folk, which toxic race prejudice
refused to regard as people at all, and
which held them undeserving of human rights
or compassionate treatment.
For a century Europe siphoned off obscene,
illicit wealth from the natural bounty of
Africa before there was even any nascent
sense that this piracy and rapine might not
be justifiable. It took two world wars’
cataclysmic impact on the consciousness of
the world to shake and begin to break the
deeply tyrannical hold European colonial
powers had on their militarily raped
colonies there, a struggle only won in blood
and misery over decades.
Franz Fanon, in “The Wretched Of The Earth”,
told the bitter and suppressed story of
colonialism’s savage, sanguinary inhumanity
to millions of subject peoples. After
colonialists were battered by world wars,
the tide of revolution ran high in Africa
and the world, with one victim state after
another breaking the failing grip of its
arrogant, alien rulers. Vietnam was last,
with America throwing its full weight
against its fight for freedom after beaten,
humiliated France was kicked out. America’s
defeat marked the end, not of colonialism,
but of the old type built on military
conquest.
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A new method of subverting and looting
the world was needed for Capitalism, since
raw conquest obviously no longer served.
America, morphing into empire, created that
superior technique. It’s key elements were
money and subversion, the one growing
naturally from the other, jointly applied in
many invisible, insidious colonial takeovers
implemented by rankest corruption.
The way it worked in target countries was
that ruling class thugs were paid great
quantities of money to overthrow or
eliminate leaders whose efforts for their
people opposed the interests of U.S.
Capital. This was an immense improvement
over conquest: it was far cheaper than
invasion and occupation, and it created no
adverse publicity, at least not in the
wholly-owned U.S. press.
The new game took breaking in, and there was
predictable bungling by ham-handed CIA boys
trained in war. Their first effort, in Iran,
they nearly blew, but in spite of amateur
hour chaos, with blind luck they managed to
run Mossadegh—who had nationalized Iran’s
oil—out, and turn the industry back over to
the Brits and jokingly named Anglo-Iranian
Oil. In Guatemala, they floundered and
bollixed their play but, again, their money
was better than they were, and they ousted
Arbenz, who only represented his people, to
balm the bitter hatred of United Fruit.
The operators of the, by now, burgeoning
American Empire and their owners and
directors, the Lords of Big Capital, were so
pleased with these scores, that the money
spigot fueling the CIA’s iffy subversion
fairly gushed by the 60s, and their
off-the-books budget expanded hugely by the
time it set up the snatch and murder of the
wildly popular, fierce nationalist Premier
of The Congo, Patrice Lumumba. Fearful of
being exposed, their great watchword became
“plausible deniability”. It bought Chilean
Generals to destroy the Socialist Premier,
Salvador Allende, who had nationalized
American-owned copper mines. They killed
him, but Kissinger was fine with that. Those
things happened.
In parallel with our manky spook program,
which had various notable pratfalls, such as
failing to kill Fidel, American Capitalism
effected massive structural changes in world
finance to support in the open what they did
in the dark with the CIA. The World Bank and
IMF, American run entities, were allegedly
created to foster Third World “development”.
In fact, they were agents of Disaster
Capitalism, pace Naomi Klein. Using
autocratic, native male whores who raked off
millions signing for huge loans, their
lending loaded poor states with unrepayable
debt, indenturing them to the banks in
perpetuity. This scam became the key form of
colonial control, and sleazy black bag jobs
and “terminating with extreme prejudice”
fell clean out of favor.
Nothing works forever, though, and it’s
clear that after murdering Qaddafi, and
insisting “Assad must go” without the stones
to make it happen, America, and its decayed,
degenerate European lapdogs, are losing
their stranglehold on Africa. In a rerun of
the breakouts of Algeria, Libya, and Kenya
in the first great wave of liberation from
the old bayonet and bullet colonialism,
central Africa across the Sahel from the
Atlantic to the Red Sea is rising against
the corrupt and fraudulent “aid”, and
“assistance” from The American Empire and
its sleazy Capitalist shysters.
In Guinea, Mali and Burkina Faso, junior
officers revolted to oust their Western
puppets, all deep in the pockets of
American-backed Capitalism, on the take and
greasing the dirty sell-out of their
people’s resources and futures. Niger has
now erupted in defiance of The Empire and
its diseased punk, France, to control its
own destiny. The psychotic Harpy, Victoria
Newland, sent to spank the naughties, was
told to bugger off, they didn’t want her
money, let her spend it on a weight-loss
program instead. The four nations vowed
that, if challenged, they will fight united
for their independence. In the world of evil
darkness The Empire has imposed, it is
heartening to see that some victim nations
are, as Sandino said, long ago, not for sale
and not surrendering.
Paul Edwards is a
writer and film-maker in Montana. He can be
reached at: hgmnude@bresnan.net