The mythology of people power

The glamour of street protests should not blind us to the reality of
US-backed coups in the former USSR

John Laughland
Friday April 1, 2005

Guardian

Before his denunciation yesterday of the "prevailing influence" of the US in
the "anti-constitutional coup" which overthrew him last week, President
Askar Akayev of Kyrgyzstan had used an interesting phrase to attack those
who were stirring up trouble in the drug-ridden Ferghana Valley. A criminal
"third force", linked to the drug mafia, was struggling to gain power. 
Originally used as a label for covert operatives shoring up apartheid in
South Africa, before being adopted by the US-backed "pro-democracy" movement
in Iran in November 2001, the third force is also the title of a book
published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, which details
how western-backed non-governmental organisations (NGOs) can promote regime
and policy change all over the world. The formulaic repetition of a third
"people power" revolution in the former Soviet Union in just over one year -
after the similar events in Georgia in November 2003 and in Ukraine last
Christmas - means that the post-Soviet space now resembles Central America
in the 1970s and 1980s, when a series of US-backed coups consolidated that
country's control over the western hemisphere. 

Many of the same US government operatives in Latin America have plied their
trade in eastern Europe under George Bush, most notably Michael Kozak,
former US ambassador to Belarus, who boasted in these pages in 2001 that he
was doing in Belarus exactly what he had been doing in Nicaragua:
"supporting democracy". 

But for some reason, many on the left seem not to have noticed this
continuity. Perhaps this is because these events are being energetically
presented as radical and leftwing even by commentators and political
activists on the right, for whom revolutionary violence is now cool. 

As protesters ransacked the presidential palace in Bishkek last week
(unimpeded by the police who were under strict instructions not to use
violence), a Times correspondent enthused about how the scenes reminded him
of Bolshevik propaganda films about the 1917 revolution. The Daily Telegraph
extolled "power to the people", while the Financial Times welcomed
Kyrgyzstan's "long march" to freedom. 

This myth of the masses spontaneously rising up against an authoritarian
regime now exerts such a grip over the collective imagination that it
persists despite being obviously false: try to imagine the American police
allowing demonstrators to ransack the White House, and you will immediately
understand that these "dictatorships" in the former USSR are in reality
among the most fragile, indulgent and weak regimes in the world. 

The US ambassador in Bishkek, Stephen Young, has spent recent months
strenuously denying government claims that the US was interfering in
Kyrgyzstan's internal affairs. But with anti-Akayev demonstrators telling
western journalists that they want Kyrgyzstan to become "the 51st state",
this official line is wearing a little thin. 

Even Young admits that Kyrgyzstan is the largest recipient of US aid in
central Asia: the US has spent $746m there since 1992, in a country with
fewer than 5 million inhabitants, and $31m was pumped in in 2004 alone under
the terms of the Freedom Support Act. As a result, the place is crawling
with what the ambassador rightly calls "American-sponsored NGOs". 

The case of Freedom House is particularly arresting. Chaired by the former
CIA director James Woolsey, Freedom House was a major sponsor of the orange
revolution in Ukraine. It set up a printing press in Bishkek in November
2003, which prints 60 opposition journals. Although it is described as an
"independent" press, the body that officially owns it is chaired by the
bellicose Republican senator John McCain, while the former national security
adviser Anthony Lake sits on the board. The US also supports opposition
radio and TV. 

Many of the recipients of this aid are open about their political aims: the
head of the US-funded Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society, Edil
Baisalov, told the New York Times that the overthrow of Akayev would have
been "absolutely impossible" without American help. In Kyrgyzstan as in
Ukraine, a key element in regime change was played by the elements in the
local secret services, whose loyalty is easily bought. 

Perhaps the most intriguing question is why? Bill Clinton's assistant
secretary of state called Akayev "a Jeffersonian democrat" in 1994, and the
Kyrgyz ex-president won kudos for welcoming US-backed NGOs and the American
military. But the ditching of old friends has become something of a habit:
both Edward Shevardnadze of Georgia and Leonid Kuchma of Ukraine were
portrayed as great reformers for most of their time in office. 

To be sure, the US has well-known strategic interests in central Asia,
especially in Kyrgyzstan. Freedom House's friendliness to the Islamist
fundamentalist movement Hizb ut-Tahrir will certainly unsettle a Beijing
concerned about Muslim unrest in its western provinces. But perhaps the
clearest message sent by Akayev's overthrow is this: in the new world order
the sudden replacement of party cadres hangs as a permanent threat - or
incentive - over even the most compliant apparatchik. 

. John Laughland is a trustee of www.oscewatch.org and an associate of
www.sandersresearch.com 



http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5160610-103677,00.html






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