Democracy Canadian-style Part I: Abroad - Liberating Libya, The Mali Adventure, Old Script Updated
28 February 2013
By Eric Walberg
Canada's role in the postmodern imperial world is as a
poster child for promoting formal electoral democracy
-- at home and abroad. Internationally, instead of
offering peacekeeping troops to the UN, as in days of
yore, and promoting grassroots development in the
third world, it takes orders directly from its US-Euro
masters, helping them invade countries if necessary to
set up the mechanisms for elections, and ignoring for
the most part the real problems that the poor of the
world face. It uses its foreign diplomatic service not
to promote peace and social justice, but to support
the needs of Canadian corporations abroad and
facilitate their quest for profits.
This has been the strategy in Afghanistan, Libya and
now Mali, the latter in cooperation with France, with
Canada providing air transport of French military
equipment. It is the mirror image of its treatment of
Canada's native people, who are force-fed a similar
formal role in Canada's political system, where formal
equality -- as exemplified in Bill C-45 -- is touted
in order to mask the real problems natives face, and
-- as if by coincidence -- at the same time pave the
way to take control of the natural resources that are
the natives' heritage.
Liberating Libya
Canada actively participated in the overthrow of
Gaddafi, who admittedly had treated Canadian
businesses cavalierly. In 2009, he nationalized the
Libyan operations of the Canadian oil company Verenex
and cut Suncor's production quota by 50%. In 2011, 12
Canadian companies had offices in Libya, and they were
well served by government policy. The Royal Canadian
Air Force bombed Libya and the Canadian navy helped
blockade the country to overthrow the legitmate
president. Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird visited
Benghazi in June and Tripoli in October 2011,
accompanied by a delegation of Canadian businessmen,
including from Suncor, to meet with National
Transitional Council members. In January 2012,
Minister of International Trade and Minister for the
Asia-Pacific Gateway Edward Fast also travelled to
Tripoli with a large business delegation to further
promote Canada-Libya trade and investment.
Officially the Canadian policy is democracy promotion,
though that claim is undermined by the governing
Conservatives' actual policies. They have disbanded or
drastically reduced the power of government agencies
that once had the responsibility of promoting
democracy at the global level, including the Office of
Democratic Governance, the Democracy Unit and the
Forum of Federations. Then there is the wholesale
government slashing of funding of NGOs involved in
democracy promotion and human rights, such as the
International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic
Development, the Canadian Human Rights Commission,
Kairos, Status of Women Canada and the Court
Challenges Program -- affecting tens of thousands of
Canadians and victims of violence around the world.
If Canada is serious about helping to establish
democracy in Libya, then encouraging a company like
Suncor to participate in the Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative (EITI) would be a good sign.
But is the role of the Canadian government to make
sure Canadian companies are responsible corporate
citizens at home and around the world? Or is it just
to promote those companies, come hell or high water?
Apparently, the latter, and the modus operandi is to
call up the minister of defence and have him 'send in
the troops'.
The Mali adventure
The recent French military intervention in Mali also
focuses on "restoring democracy", without any
consideration for the political and economic problems
that caused the Malian government's collapse. Mali's
colonial era borders were fashioned by the French,
lumping the desert north (sparsely populated by
light-skinned nomadic Arab-Berber and Tuareg), and the
more fecund south populated by dozens of darker,
sub-Saharan tribes. The French tried to impose le
francais as the lingua franca, but most Malians were
not interested, and Bambara is spoken by 80% of
Malians (the Bambara constitute almost 40% of the
population). This is hardly surprising, as almost 70%
of Malians are illiterate and 50% live in poverty.
The idea of the invasion is to 'defeat the terrorists'
in the north and push Mali back into its pre-2011
shaky electoral democracy. There is no chance that any
duly elected government will survive, given the
pressing social problems and the impossible ethnic
stand-off which led to the collapse of the previous
government, led by retired general president Amadou
Toure. He was deposed in March 2012 by another
military officer Amadou Sanogo, as the Tuareg were
declaring their independent state of Azawad. Under
French pressure, civilian centrist Dioncounda Traoré
was declared interim president in April 2012, and
already plans to hold the elections so precious to the
West in July 2013 -- as if they will make any
difference.
Mali is Africa's third largest producer of gold, a
sector dominated by foreign firms, including the
Canadian IAMGOLD and Avion. It is also a major uranium
and cotton producer. These industries are entirely
devoted to export and based in the south. Government
revenue relies mostly on their crumbs and of course
international aid. Despite its relatively small
population of 15.8m, Mali is the fourth largest
recipient in Africa of Canada's foreign aid, mostly to
promote food security and improve health standards in
the south. Aid payments (which largely went to the
government) were suspended after the March 2012 coup,
and the Canadian military assisted the French in the
invasion of the north in January.
Ndiaga Loum, professor of law and human rights at the
University of Québec, told Think Africa Press: "It's
not enough to have ministers dressed in business suits
and not military uniforms to say it's a democratic
model. The error analysts make is to confuse a country
in a democratic transition with a truly democratic
state." The military intervention to prop up the
brittle neocolonial regime will – the imperialists
hope – prop up similarly dysfunctional
pseudo-democracies in Mali's neighbors Mauritania,
Burkina Faso and Niger. Now, buttressed by AFRICOM,
the US military command in Africa, which Niger has
tentatively agreed to host. (Niger has given
permission for US surveillance drones to be stationed
on its territory to improve intelligence on al-Qaeda-linked
Islamist fighters in northern Mali and the wider
Sahara.)
With no sustained literacy or industrialization
campaigns in any of these countries since
independence, it is hard to imagine this reversion to
old-style imperialism to deal with Malian-type crises
will be successful. Only disinterested regional
efforts to address the region's instability and dire
poverty can possibly help. Bilateral aid address to
neocolonial elites has little positive effect on the
daily lives of the common people, who are divided into
a complex array of tribes, with no relationship to
colonial culture or borders. Mali merely is an extreme
case, where the north must be addressed in the context
of the Saharan Berbers, who inhabit the north Africa
states as well as Mali and its Sahelian neighbors.
Old script updated
But it is wrong to think that this neocolonial policy
of continuing to prop up the old colonial system, now
via local elites, is some kind of terrible mistake. It
is a calculated one and very clever (if sticking a
finger in the dyke can be considered a clever way to
stop a flood). R2P (right to protect), the ideology
behind it, justifies invading countries and killing
hundreds/ thousands (who-knows?) of anti-imperialist
rebels as 'terrorists', in the process terrorizing the
locals into 'welcoming' the invaders as liberators
(Nazi invaders were similarly welcomed in WWII).
Embedded western media sweep in on the coattails of
the invaders, to record the ‘liberation'. This
scenario was scripted in Libya in 2011. In the case of
the French invasion of Mali, ‘Socialist' President
Francois Hollande himself piggy-backed in with the
invaders, like a latter-day Napoleon.
Scripting this rousing scenario is vital, as it
distracts one and all from the real problem behind the
collapse of governments across the neocolonial world.
Where countries – for example, Tunisia -- have tried
to shake off this neocolonial paternalism, their
governments are vilified by the West and often
undermined. Poor Tunisia, where the Muslim Brotherhood
formed a government after decades of western-backed
suppression by a corrupt secular regime, now faces
subversion, most recently the assassination of secular
opposition leader Chokri Belaid. Instead of trying to
help the new popular but inexperienced leaders, French
Interior Minister Manuel Valls declared that Tunisia
was not a model for the Arab Spring because of its
"Islamic fascist dictatorship", thereby lumping all
Islamists together as potential terrorists threatening
France. At least Canadian officials are slightly more
discrete in their comments.
The staunchly secular Tunisian Francophone elite, who
have done everything possible to undermine the popular
government, is subservient to France politically and
culturally to such an extent that some of its members
have demanded direct French intervention to rescue the
country, looking over their shoulders at Tunisia and
Mali as the new model. This scenario is repeated in
Egypt, where the militant secularist opposition is
also frantically cooperating with the old guard,
directly in league with the West's postmodern agenda.
The fallout from this Machiavellian strategy -- the
destabilization of the entire Sahara region, possibly
all of north Africa -- apparently is worth the price.
In Mali, the return home of disgruntled jobless
mercenaries from Libya upset the fragile neocolonial
equilibrium, requiring mopping up by the previous
colonial power France. Regional Islamist movements,
unimpressed by the NATO ‘shock and awe' that toppled
Gaddafi, felt they could now achieve in the Sahel what
they had failed to in Algeria twenty years ago: an
Islamic state, but this time based on a narrower and
more intolerant interpretation of sharia law.
The invasion of northern Mali was purportedly another
R2P venture, to avenge the lopping off of a few dozen
sinners' hands or heads, but this is a pretext only.
Already, the French have killed hundreds of rebels
('good' or 'bad') and hundreds of innocents as
'collateral damage'. A life is a life, and a death --
a death. The imperialists are the masters at killing
and terrorism. The US cynically ignores (if not
actively promotes) genuine terrorism which does not
'qualify' by its definition. Inter alia, it just
blocked a Russian-proposed UN Security Council
resolution which condemned the terrorist attack in
Damascus 21 February which killed 53.
While it is the 'big guns' of the US, France, et al
that initiate these invasions and/or arm the
appropriate insurgents (note, in the above instances,
all the victims are Muslims), Canada dutifully follows
in their wake. There is no role for the UN in this
postmodern imperialism (where 'imperialism' is just a
word, signifying nothing, as the exploitation is
completely hidden behind the 'market' and US dollar/
military hegemony). It is not surprising that Canada
under its oxymoronic neoliberal neoconservatives has
decided to dispense with its neutral do-good image
there (however little it actually corresponded to
reality) in favor of direct support for the empire.
After all, it is the empire that controls (or has
pretenses to control) the world, so why bother with
pretenses to the contrary?
*** a version of this appeared at http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/02/25/290714/
canadas-direct-support-for-imperialism/ Eric
Walberg is author of Postmodern Imperialism:
Geopolitics and the Great Games (2011) http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html
http://ericwalberg.com