The Technique of a Coup d'État
by
John Laughland
by John Laughland
Recently by John Laughland: Solzhenitsyn
and the Russian Question
In recent years,
a number of "revolutions" have broken out all over the
world.
1. Georgia
In November
2003, the president of Georgia Edward Shevardnadze was overthrown
following demonstrations, marches and allegations that the parliamentary
elections had been rigged.
2. Ukraine
In November
2004, the "Orange Revolution" of demonstrations started
in Ukraine as the same allegations were made, that elections had
been rigged.
The result
was that country was ripped away from its previous geopolitical
role as a bridge between East and West, and put it on the path to
becoming a fully-fledged member of NATO and the EU. Considering
that Kievan Rus is the first Russian state, and that Ukraine has
now been turned against Russia, this is a historic achievement.
But then, as George Bush said, "You are either with us or against
us." Although Ukraine had sent troops to Iraq, it was evidently
considered too friendly to Moscow.
3. Lebanon
Shortly after
the US and the UN declared that Syrian troops had to be removed
from Lebanon, and following the assassination of Rafik Hariri, demonstrations
in Beirut were presented as "the Cedar Revolution." An
enormous counter-demonstration by Hezbollah, which is the largest
political party in Syria, was effectively ignored while the TV replayed
endlessly the image of the anti-Syrian crowd. In one particularly
egregious case of Orwellian double-think, the BBC explained to its
viewers that "Hezbollah, the biggest political party in Lebanon,
is so far the only dissenting voice which wants the Syrians to stay."
How can the majority be "a dissenting voice"?
4. Kyrgyzstan
After the "revolutions"
in Georgia and Ukraine, many predicted that the same wave of "revolutions"
would extend to the former Soviet states of Central Asia. So it
was to be. Commentators seemed divided on what colour to label the
uprising in Bishkek was it a "lemon" revolution
or a "tulip" revolution? They could not make up their
minds. But on one thing, everyone was in agreement: revolutions
are cool, even when they are violent. The Kyrgyz president, Askar
Akayev, was overthrown on 24th March 2005 and protesters stormed
and ransacked the presidential palace.
5. Uzbekistan
When armed
rebels seized government buildings, sprung prisoners from gaol and
took hostages on the night of 12th13th May in the Uzbek city
of Andijan (located in the Ferghana Valley, where the unrest had
also started in neighbouring Kyrgyzstan) the police and army surrounded
the rebels and a long standoff ensued. Negotiations were undertaken
with the rebels, who kept increasing their demands. When government
forces started to move on the rebels, the resulting fighting killed
some 160 people including over 30 members of the police and army.
Yet the Western media immediately misrepresented this violent confrontation,
claiming that government forces had opened fire on unarmed protesters
"the people."
This constantly
repeated myth of popular rebellion against a dictatorial government
is popular on both the Left and the Right of the political spectrum.
Previously, the myth of revolution was obviously the preserve of
the Left. But when the violent putsch occurred in Kygyrzstan, The
Times enthused about how the scenes in Bishkek reminded him
of Eisenstein films about the Bolshevik revolution, The Daily
Telegraph extolled the "power to the people," and
the Financial Times used a well-known Maoist metaphor when
it praised Kyrgyzstans "long march to freedom."
One of the
key elements behind this myth is obviously that "the people"
are behind the events, and that they are spontaneous. In fact, of
course, they are often very highly organised operations, often deliberately
staged for the media, and usually funded and controlled by transnational
networks of so-called non-governmental organisations which are in
turn instruments of Western power.
1. The literature
on coups détat
The survival
of the myth of spontaneous popular revolution is depressing in view
of the ample literature on the coup détat, and on the
main factors and tactics by which to bring one about.
It was, of
course, Lenin who developed the organisational structure for overthrowing
a regime which we now know as a political party. He differed from
Marx in that he did not think that historical change was the result
of ineluctable anonymous forces, but that it had to be worked for.
But it was
probably Curzio Malapartes Technique
of a Coup détat which first gave very famous
expression to these ideas. Published in 1931, this book presents
regime change as just that a technique. Malaparte explicitly
took issue with those who thought that regime change happened on
its own. In fact, he starts the book by recounting a discussion
between diplomats in Warsaw in the summer of 1920: Poland had been
invaded by Trostkys Red Army (Poland having itself invaded
the Soviet Union, capturing Kiev in April 1920) and the Bolsheviks
were at the gates of Warsaw. The debate was between the British
minister in Warsaw, Sir Horace Rumbold, and the Papal nuncio, Monsignor
Ambrogio Damiano Achille Ratti the man who was elected Pope
as Pius XI two years later. The Englishman said that the internal
political situation in Poland was so chaotic that a revolution was
inevitable, and that the diplomatic corps therefore should flee
the capital and go to Posen (Poznán). The Papal Nuncio disagreed,
insisting that a revolution was just as possible in a civilised
country like England, Holland or Switzerland as in a country in
a state of anarchy. Naturally the Englishman was outraged at the
idea that a revolution could ever break out in England. "Oh
never!" he exclaimed and was proved wrong because no
revolution did break out in Poland, according to Malaparte because
the revolutionary forces were simply not well organised enough.
This anecdote
allows Malaparte to discuss the differences between Lenin and Trotsky,
two practitioners of the coup détat/revolution. Malaparte
shows that the future Pope was right and that it was wrong to say
that pre-conditions were necessary for a revolution to occur. For
Malaparte, as for Trotsky, regime change could be promoted in any
country, including the stable democracies of Western Europe, providing
that there was a sufficiently determined body of men determined
to achieve it.
2. Manufacturing
consent
This brings
us onto a second body of literature, concerning the manipulation
of the media. Malaparte himself does not discuss this aspect but
it is (a) of huge importance and (b) clearly a subset of the technique
of a coup détat in the way regime change is practised
today. So important, indeed, is the control of the media during
regime change that one of the main characteristics of these revolutions
is the creation of a virtual reality. Control of this reality is
itself an instrument of power, which is why in classic coups in
a banana republic the first thing that the revolutionaries seize
is the radio station.
People experience
a strong psychological reluctance to accept that political events
today are deliberately manipulated. This reluctance is itself a
product of the ideology of the information age, which flatters peoples
vanity and encourages them to believe that they have access to huge
amounts of information. In fact, the apparent multifarious nature
of modern media information hides an extreme paucity of original
sources, rather as a street of restaurants on a Greek waterfront
can hide the reality of a single kitchen at the back. News reports
of major events very often come from a single source, usually a
wire agency, and even authoritative news outlets like the BBC simply
recycle information which they have received from these agencies,
presenting it as their own. BBC correspondents are often sitting
in their hotel rooms when they send despatches, very often simply
reading back to the studio in London information they have been
given by their colleagues back home off the wire. A second factor
which explains the reluctance to believe in media manipulation is
connected with the feeling of omniscience which the mass media age
likes to flatter: to rubbish news reports as manipulated is to tell
people that they are gullible, and this is not a pleasant message
to receive.
There are many
elements to media manipulation. One of the most important is political
iconography. This is a very important instrument for promoting the
legitimacy of regimes which have seized power through revolution.
One only need think of such iconic events as the storming of the
Bastille on 14th July 1789, the storming of the Winter Palace during
the October revolution in 1917, or Mussolinis March on Rome
in 1922, to see that events can be elevated into almost eternal
sources of legitimacy.
However, the
importance of political imagery goes far beyond the invention of
a simple emblem for each revolution. It involves a far deeper control
of the media, and generally this control needs to be exercised over
a long period of time, not just at the moment of regime change itself.
It is essential indeed, for the official party line to be repeated
ad nauseam. A feature of todays mass media culture which many
dissidents lazily and wrongly denounce as "totalitarian"
is precisely that dissenting views may be expressed and published,
but this is precisely because, being mere drops in the ocean, they
are never a threat to the tide of propaganda.
2a. Willi
Münzenberg
One of the
modern masters of such media control was the German Communist from
whom Joseph Goebbels learned his trade, Willi Münzenberg. Münzenberg
was not only the inventor of spin, he was also the first person
who perfected the art of creating a network of opinion-forming journalists
who propagated views which were germane to the needs of the Communist
Party in Germany and to the Soviet Union. He also made a huge fortune
in the process, since he amassed a considerable media empire from
which he creamed off the profits.
Münzenberg
was intimately involved with the Communist project from the very
beginning. He belonged to Lenins circle in Zurich, and in
1917 accompanied the future leader of the Bolshevik revolution to
the Zurich Hauptbahnhof, from whence Lenin was transported in a
sealed train, and with the help of the German imperial authorities,
to the Finland Station in St. Petersburg. Lenin then called on Münzenberg
to combat the appalling publicity generated in 1921 when 25 million
peasants in the Volga region started to suffer from the famine which
swept across the newly created Soviet state. Münzenberg, who
had by then returned to Berlin, where he was later elected to the
Reichstag as a Communist deputy, was charged with setting up a bogus
workers charity, the Foreign Committee for the Organisation
of Worker Relief for the Hungry in Soviet Russia, whose purpose
was to pretend to the world that humanitarian relief was coming
from sources other than Herbert Hoovers American Relief Administration.
Lenin feared not only that Hoover would use his humanitarian aid
project to send spies into the USSR (which he did) but also, perhaps
even more importantly, that the worlds first Communist state
would be fatally damaged by the negative publicity of seeing capitalist
America come to its aid within a few years of the revolution.
After having
cut his teeth on "selling" the death of millions of people
at the hands of the Bolsheviks, Münzenberg turned his attention
to more general propaganda activities. He amassed a large media
empire, known as "the Münzenberg trust," which owned
two mass circulation dailies in Germany, a mass circulation weekly,
and which had interests in scores of other publications around the
world. His greatest coups were to mobilise world opinion against
America over the Sacco-Vanzetti trial (that of two anarchist Italian
immigrants who were sentenced to death for murder in Massachusetts
in 1921) and to counteract the Nazis claim in 1933 that the
Reichstag fire was the result of a Communist conspiracy. The Nazis,
it will be remembered, used the fire to justify mass arrests and
executions against Communists, even though it now appears that the
fire genuinely was started on his own by the man arrested in the
building at the time, the lone arsonist Martinus van der Lubbe.
Münzenberg actually managed to convince large sections of public
opinion of the equal but opposite untruth to that peddled by the
Nazis, namely that the Nazis had started the fire themselves in
order to have a pretext for removing their main enemies.
The key relevance
of Münzenberg for our own day is this: he understood the key
importance of influencing opinion-formers. He targeted especially
intellectuals, taking the view that intellectuals were especially
easy to influence because they were so vain. His contacts included
many of the great literary figures of the 1930s, a large number
of whom were encouraged by him to support the Republicans in the
Spanish civil war and to make that into a cause-célèbre
of Communist anti-fascism. Münzenbergs tactics are of
primary importance to the manipulation of opinion in todays
New World Order. More then ever before, so-called "experts"
constantly pop up on our TV screens to explain what is happening,
and they are always vehicles for the official party line. They are
controlled in various ways, usually by money or by flattery.
2b. Psychology
and the manipulation of opinion
There is a
second body of literature, which makes a slightly different point
from the specific technique which Münzenberg perfected. This
concerns the way in which people can be made to react in certain
collective ways by psychological stimuli. Perhaps the first major
theoretician of this was Sigmund Freuds nephew, Edward Bernays,
whose book Propaganda
in 1928 said that it was entirely natural and right for governments
to organise public opinion for political purposes. The opening chapter
of his book has the revealing title "Organising chaos"
and Bernays writes,
The conscious
and intelligent manipulation of the organised opinions and habits
of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those
who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an
invisible government which is the true ruling power of
our country. [my italics]
(The text
continues: "We are governed, our minds are moulded, our tastes
formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard
of. This is a logical result of the way in which our democratic
society is organized. Vast numbers of human beings must cooperate
in this manner if they are to live together as a smoothly functioning
society. ... In almost every act of our daily lives, whether in
the sphere of politics or business, in our social conduct or our
ethical thinking, we are dominated by the relatively small number
of persons ... who understand the mental processes and social
patterns of the masses. It is they who pull the wires which control
the public mind.")
Bernays says
that, very often, the members of this invisible government do not
even know who the other members are. Propaganda, he says, is the
only way to prevent public opinion descending into dissonant chaos.
Bernays continued to work on this theme after the war, editing "Engineering
consent" in 1955, a title to which Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky
alluded when they published their seminal Manufacturing
Consent in 1988. The connection with Freud is important
because, as we shall see later, psychology is an extremely important
tool in influencing public opinion. Two of the contributors to "Engineering
consent" make the point that every leader must play on basic
human emotions in order to manipulate public opinion. For instance,
Doris E. Fleischmann and Howard Walden Cutler write,
Self-preservation,
ambition, pride, hunger, love of family and children, patriotism,
imitativeness, the desire to be a leader, love of play
these and other drives are the psychological raw materials which
every leader must take into account in his endeavour to win the
public to his point of view
To maintain their self-assurance,
most people need to feel certain that whatever they believe about
anything is true.
This was what
Willi Münzenberg understood the basic human urge for
people to believe what they want to believe. Thomas Mann alluded
to it when he attributed the rise of Hitler to the collective desire
of the German people for "a fairy tale" over the ugly
truths of reality.
Other books
worth mentioning in this regard concern not so much modern electronic
propaganda but the more general psychology of crowds. The classics
in this regard are Gustave Le Bons work The Psychology
of Crowds (1895), Elias Canettis Crowds and Power
(Masse und Macht) (1980); and Serge Tchakhotines Le
viol des foules par la propagande politique (1939). All these
books draw heavily on psychology and anthropology. There is also
the magnificent oeuvre of one of my favourite writers, the anthropologist
René Girard, whose writings on the logic of imitation (mimesis),
and on collective acts of violence, are excellent tools for understanding
why it is that public opinion is so easily motivated to support
war and other forms of political violence.
2c. The
technique of opinion-forming
After the war,
many of the techniques perfected by the Communist Münzenberg
were adopted by the Americans, as has been magnificently documented
by Frances Stonor Saunders excellent work, Who Paid the
Piper?, published in America under the title The
Cultural Cold War.
In minute detail,
Stonor Saunders explains how, as the Cold War started, the Americans
and the British started up a massive covert operation to fund anti-communist
intellectuals. The key point is that much of their attention and
activity was directed at left-wingers, in many cases Trotskyites
who had abandoned their support for the Soviet Union only in 1939,
when Stalin signed his non-aggression pact with Hitler, and in many
cases people who had previously worked for Münzenberg. Many
of the figures who were at this juncture between Communism and the
CIA at the beginning of the cold war were future neo-conservatives
luminaries, especially Irving Kristol, James Burnham, Sidney Hook
and Lionel Trilling.
The left-wing
and even Trotskyite origins of neo-conservatism are well-known
even if I still continue to be astonished by new details I discover,
such as that Lionel and Diana Trilling were married by a rabbi for
whom Felix Dzherzhinsky the founder of the Bolshevik secret
police, the Cheka (forerunner of the KGB), and the Communist equivalent
of Heinrich Himmler represented a heroic paragon. These left-wing
origins are particularly relevant to the covert operations discussed
by Stonor Saunders, because the CIAs goal was precisely to
influence left-wing opponents of Communism, i.e. Trotskyites. The
CIAs view was simply that right-wing anti-communists did not
need to be influenced, much less paid. Stonor Saunders quotes Michael
Warner when she writes,
For the CIA,
the strategy of promoting the Non-Communist Left was to become
"the theoretical foundation of the Agencys political
operations against Communism over the next two decades."
This strategy
was outlined in Arthur Schlesingers The
Vital Center (1949), a book which represents one of the
cornerstones of what was later to become the neo-conservative movement.
Stonor Saunders writes,
The purpose
of supporting leftist groups was not to destroy or even dominate,
but rather to maintain a discreet proximity to and monitor the
thinking of such groups; to provide them with a mouthpiece so
that they could blow off steam; and, in extremis, to exercise
a final veto over their actions, if they ever got too "radical."
Many and varied
were the ways in which this left-wing influence was felt. The USA
was determined to fashion for itself a progressive image, in contrast
to the "reactionary" Soviet Union. In other words, it
wanted to do precisely what the Soviets were doing. In music, for
instance, Nicholas Nabokov (the cousin of the author of Lolita)
was one of the Congress main agents. In 1954, the CIA funded
a music festival in Rome in which Stalins "authoritarian"
love of composers like Rimsky-Korsakov and Tchaikovsky was "countered"
by unorthodox modern music inspired by Schoenbergs twelve-tone
system.
For Nabokov,
there was a clear political message to be imparted by promoting
music which announced itself as doing away with natural hierarchies
Support for
other progressives came when Jackson Pollock, himself a former Communist,
was also promoted by the CIA. His daubs were supposed to represent
the American ideology of "freedom" over the authoritarianism
of socialist realist painting. (This alliance with Communists pre-dates
the Cold War: the Mexican Communist muralist, Diego Rivera, was
supported by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, but their collaboration ended
abruptly when Rivera refused to remove a portrait of Lenin from
a crowd scene painted on the walls of the Rockefeller Center in
1933.)
This cross-over
between culture and politics was explicitly promoted by a CIA body
which went under an Orwellian name, the Psychological Strategy Board.
In 1956, it covertly promoted a European tour by the Metropolitan
Opera, the political purpose of which was to encourage multiculturalism.
Junkie Fleischmann, the organiser, said,
We, in the
United States, are a melting-pot and, by being so, we have demonstrated
that peoples can get along together irrespective of race, colour
or creed. Using the "melting-pot" or some such catch
phrase for a theme we might be able to use the Met as an example
of how Europeans can get along together in the United States and
that, therefore, some sort of European Federation is entirely
practicable.
This, by the
way, is exactly the same argument employed by, among other people,
Ben Wattenberg, whose book The
First Universal Nation argues that America has a special
right to world hegemony because she embodies all the nations and
races of the planet. The same view has also been expressed by Newt
Gingrich and other neo-cons.
Other themes
promoted include some which are at the forefront of neo-conservative
thinking today. First among these is the eminently liberal belief
in moral and political universalism. Today, this is at the very
heart of George W. Bushs own foreign policy philosophy: he
has stated on numerous occasions that political values are the same
all over the world, and he has used this assumption to justify US
military intervention in favour of "democracy." Back in
the early 1950s, the director of the PSB (the Psychological Strategy
Board was quickly referred to only by its initials, no doubt in
order to hide its real name), Raymond Allen, had already arrived
at this conclusion.
The principles
and ideals embodied in the Declaration of Independence and the
Constitution are for export and
are the heritage of men
everywhere. We should appeal to the fundamental urges of all men
which I believe are the same for the farmer in Kansas as for the
farmer in Punjab.
To be sure,
it would be wrong to attribute the spread of ideas only to covert
manipulation. They have their force in large-scale cultural currents,
whose causes are multiple. But there is no doubt that the dominance
of such ideas can be substantially facilitated by covert operations,
especially since people in mass-information societies are curiously
suggestible. Not only do they believe what they have read in the
papers, they also think they have arrived at these conclusions themselves.
The trick of manipulating public opinion, therefore, lies precisely
in that which Bernays theorised, Münzenberg initiated, and
which the CIA raised to a high art. According to CIA agent Donald
Jameson,
As far as
the attitudes that the Agency wanted to inspire through these
activities are concerned, clearly what they would like to have
been able to produce were people who, of their own reasoning and
conviction, were persuaded that everything the United States government
did was right.
To put it another
way, what the CIA and other US agencies were doing during this period
was to adopt the strategy which we associate with the Italian Marxist,
Antonio Gramsci, who argued that "cultural hegemony" was
essential for socialist revolution.
2d. Disinformation
Finally, there
is a huge body of literature on the technique of disinformation.
I have already referred to the important fact, originally formulated
by Tchakotine (Chakotin), that the role of journalists and the media
is key in ensuring that propaganda is constant: "Propaganda
cannot take time off," he writes, thereby formulating one of
the key rules of modern disinformation, which is that the required
message must be repeated very frequently indeed if it is to pass.
Above all, Tchakotine (Chakotin) says that propaganda campaigns
must be centrally directed and highly organised, something which
has become the norm in the age of modern political "spin":
British Labour Members of Parliament, for instance, are not allowed
to speak to the media without first asking permission from the Director
of Communications in 10, Downing Street.
Sefton Delmer
was both a practician and theoretician of such "black propaganda."
Delmer created a bogus radio station which broadcasted from Britain
to Germany during the Second World War, and which created the myth
that there were "good" patriotic Germans who opposed Hitler.
The fiction was sustained that the station was actually an underground
German one, and was put on frequencies close to those of official
stations. Such black propaganda has now become part of the US governments
armoury of spin: the New York Times revealed
that the US government makes news reports favourable to its policies
which are then carried on normal channels and presented as if they
were the broadcast companys own reports.
There are many
other such authors, some of whom I have discussed in my column,
All News is Lies. But perhaps the most relevant to todays
discussion is Roger Mucchiellis book, Subversion,
published in French in 1971, which shows how disinformation had
moved from being an auxiliary tactic in war to a principal one.
The strategy had developed so far, he said, that the goal was now
to conquer a state without even attacking physically, especially
through the use of agents of influence inside it. This is essentially
what Robert Kaplan proposed and discussed in his essay for The
Atlantic Monthly in July/August 2003, "Supremacy by Stealth."
One of the most sinister theoreticians of the New World Order and
the American empire, Robert Kaplan, explicitly advocates the use
of immoral and illegal power to promote US control of the whole
world. His essay deals with the use of covert operations, military
power, dirty tricks, black propaganda, hidden influence and control,
opinion-forming and other things like political assassination, all
subject to his overall call for "a pagan ethic," as the
means to ensuring American domination.
The other key
point about Mucchielli is that he was one of the first theoreticians
of the use of bogus non-governmental organisations or "front
organisations" as they used to be known for effecting
internal political change in another state. Like Malaparte and Trotsky,
Mucchielli also understood that it was not "objective"
circumstances which determined the success or failure of a revolution,
but instead the perception created of those circumstances by disinformation.
He also understood that historical revolutions, which invariably
presented themselves as the product of mass movements, were in fact
the work of a tiny number of highly organised conspirators. In fact,
again like Trotsky, Mucchielli emphasised that the silent majority
must be rigorously excluded from the mechanics of political change,
precisely because coups détat are the work of the few
and not the many.
Public opinion
was the "forum" in which subversion was practised, and
Mucchielli showed the different ways in which the mass media could
be used to create a collective psychosis. Psychological factors
were extremely important in this regard, he said, especially in
the pursuit of important strategies such as the demoralisation of
a society. The enemy must be made to lose confidence in the rightness
of his own cause, while all effort must be made to convince him
that his adversary is invincible.
2e. The
role of the military
One final historical
point before we move onto a discussion of the present: the role
of the military in conducting covert operations and influencing
political change. This is something which some contemporary analysts
are happy to admit is deployed today: Robert Kaplan writes approvingly
of how the American military is and should be used to "promote
democracy." Kaplan says deliciously that a phone call from
a US general is often a better way of promoting political change
in a third country than a phone call from the local US ambassador.
And he approvingly quotes an Army Special Operations officer saying,
"Whoever the President of Kenya is, the same group of guys
run their special forces and the President's bodyguards. We've trained
them. That translates into diplomatic leverage."
The historical
background to this has recently been discussed by a Swiss academic,
Daniele Glaser, in his book, Natos
Secret Army. His account begins with the admission made
on 3rd August 1990 by Giulio Andreotti, the then Italian Prime Minister,
that a secret army had existed in his country since the end of the
Second World War, known as "Gladio"; that it had been
created by the CIA and MI6; and that it was coordinated by the unorthodox
warfare section of NATO.
He thereby
confirmed one of the most long-running rumours in post-war Italy.
Many people, including investigating magistrates, had long suspected
that Gladio was not only party of a network of secret armies created
by the Americans across Western Europe to fight in the resistance
to a putative Soviet occupation, but also that these networks had
become involved in influencing the outcome of elections, even to
the extent of forming sinister alliances with terrorist organisations.
Italy was a particular target because the Communist Party was so
strong there.
Originally,
this secret army was constructed with the aim of providing for the
eventuality of an invasion. But it seems that they soon moved to
covert operations aimed at influencing the political process itself,
in the absence of an invasion. There is ample evidence that the
Americans did indeed interfere massively, especially in Italian
elections, in order to prevent the PCI from ever winning power.
Tens of billions of dollars were funded to the Italian Christian
Democrats by the US for this very reason.
Glaser even
argues that there is evidence that Gladio cells carried out terrorist
attacks in order to blame Communists, and to frighten the population
into demanding extra state powers to "protect" them from
terrorism. Ganser quotes the man convicted of planting one of these
bombs, Vincenzo Vinciguerra, who duly explained the nature of the
network of which he was a foot soldier. He said that it was part
of a strategy "to destabilise in order to stabilise."
You had to
attack civilians, the people, women, children, innocent people,
unknown people far removed from any political game. The reason
was quite simple. They were supposed to force these people, the
Italian public, to turn to the state to ask for greater security.
This is the political logic which remains behind all the massacres
and the bombings which remain unpunished, because the state cannot
convict itself or declare itself responsible for what happened.
There is an
obvious relevance to the conspiracy theories swirling around 9/11.
Ganser presents a host of good evidence that this is indeed what
Gladio did, and his arguments shed light on the intriguing possibility
that there might also have been an alliance with extreme left-wing
groups like the Red Brigades. After all, when Aldo Moro was kidnapped,
shortly after which he was assassinated, he was physically on the
way to the Italian parliament to present a programme for a coalition
government between the Socialists and the Communists precisely
the thing the Americans were determined to prevent.
3. Todays
revolutionary tacticians
These historical
works help us to understand what is going on today. My colleagues
and I from the British Helsinki Human Rights Group have personally
witnessed how the same techniques are used today.
The main tactics
were perfected in Latin America during the 1970s and 1980s. Indeed,
many of the operatives of regime change under Ronald Reagan and
George Bush Sr. have happily plied their trade in the former Soviet
bloc under Bill Clinton and George Bush Jr. For instance, General
Manuel Noriega reports in his memoirs that the two CIA-State Department
operatives who were sent to negotiate and then engineer his downfall
from power in Panama in 1989 were called William Walker and Michael
Kozak: William Walker resurfaced in Kosovo in January 1999 when,
as head of the Kosovo Verification Mission, he oversaw the artificial
creation of a bogus atrocity which proved to be the casus belli
for the Kosovo war, while Michael Kozak became US ambassador to
Belarus, where in 2001 he mounted "Operation White Stork"
designed to overthrow the incumbent president, Alexander Lukashenko.
During an exchange of letters to The Guardian in 2001, Kozak brazenly
admitted that he was doing in Belarus exactly what he had been doing
in Nicaragua and Panama, namely "promoting democracy."
There are essentially
three branches to the modern technique of a coup détat.
They are non-governmental organisations, control of the media, and
covert operatives. Their activities are effectively interchangeable
so I will not deal with them separately.
3a. Serbia
2000
The overthrow
of Slobodan Miloevic was obviously not the first time the
West used covert influence to effect regime change. The overthrow
of Sali Berisha in Albania in 1997 and of Vladimir Meciar in Slovakia
in 1998 were heavily influenced by the West and, in the case of
Berisha, an extremely violent uprising was presented as a spontaneous
and welcome example of people power. I personally observed how the
international community, and especially the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), fiddled its election observation
results in order to ensure political change. However, the overthrow
of Slobodan Miloevic in Belgrade on 5th October 2000 is important
because he is such a well-known figure, and because the "revolution"
which unseated him involved a very ostentatious use of "people
power."
The background
to the putsch against Miloevic has been brilliantly described
by Tim Marshall, a reporter for Sky TV. His account is valuable
because he writes approvingly of the events he describes; it is
also interesting because this journalist boasts of his extensive
contacts with the secret services, especially those of Britain and
America.
At every turn,
Marshall seems to know who the main intelligence players are. His
account is thick with references to "an MI6 officer in Pritina,"
"sources in Yugoslav military intelligence," "a CIA
man who was helping to put together the coup," an "officer
in US naval intelligence," and so on. He quotes secret surveillance
reports from the Serbian secret police; he knows who the Ministry
of Defence desk officer is in London who draws up the strategy for
getting rid of Miloevic; he knows that the British Foreign
Secretarys telephone conversations are being listened to;
he knows who are the Russian intelligence officers who accompany
Yevgeni Primakov, the Russian prime minister, to Belgrade during
the Nato bombing; he knows which rooms are bugged in the British
embassy, and where the Yugoslav spies are who listen in to the diplomats
conversations; he knows that a staffer on the US House of Representatives
International Relations Committee is, in fact, an officer in US
naval intelligence; he seems to know that secret service decisions
are often taken with the very minimal ministerial approval; he describes
how the CIA physically escorted the KLA delegation from Kosovo to
Paris for the pre-war talks at Rambouillet, where Nato issued Yugoslavia
with an ultimatum it knew it could only reject; and he refers to
"a British journalist" acting as a go-between between
London and Belgrade for hugely important high-level secret negotiations,
as people sought to betray one another as Miloevics
power collapsed. (My suspicion is that he may be talking about himself
at this point.)
One of the
themes which inadvertently runs through his book is that there is
a thin dividing line between journalists and spooks. Early on in
the book, Marshall refers casually to "the inevitable connections
between officers, journalists and politicians," saying that
people in all three categories "work in the same area."
He then goes on jokingly to say that "a combination of spooks,
journos and politicos, added to the
people" were what had caused the overthrow of Slobodan
Miloevic. Marshall clings to the myth that "the people"
were involved, but the rest of his book shows that in fact the overthrow
of the Yugoslav president occurred only because of political strategies
deliberately conceived in London and Washington to get rid of him.
Above all,
Marshall makes it clear that, in 1998, the US State Department and
intelligence agencies decided to use the Kosovo Liberation Army
to get rid of Slobodan Miloevic. He quotes one source saying,
"The US agenda was clear. When the time was right they were
going to use the KLA to provide the solution to the political problem"
the "problem" being, as Marshall explains earlier,
Miloevics continued political survival. This meant supporting
the KLAs terrorist secessionism, and later fighting a war
against Yugoslavia on its side. Marshall quotes Mark Kirk, a US
naval intelligence officer, saying that, "Eventually we opened
up a huge operation against Miloevic, both secret and open."
The secret part of the operation involved not only things like stuffing
the various observer missions which were sent into Kosovo with officers
from the British and American intelligence services, but also
crucially giving military, technical, financial, logistical
and political support to the KLA, which, as Marshall himself admits,
"smuggled drugs, ran prostitution rackets and murdered civilians."
The strategy
began in late 1998 when "a huge CIA mission (got) underway
in Kosovo." President Miloevic had allowed the Kosovo
Diplomatic Observer Mission to enter Kosovo to monitor the situation
in the province. This ad hoc group was immediately stuffed with
British and American intelligence agents and special forces
men from the CIA, US naval intelligence, the British SAS and something
called "14th intelligence," a body within the British
army which operates side by side with the SAS "to provide what
is known as deep surveillance." The immediate purpose
of this operation was "Intelligence Preparation of Battlefield"
a modern version of what the Duke of Wellington used to do,
riding up and down the battlefield to get the lie of the land before
engaging the enemy. So as Marshall puts it, "Officially, the
KDOM was run by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in
Europe
unofficially, the CIA ran (it)
The organisation
was just packed with them
It was a CIA front." Many
of the officers in fact worked for another CIA front, DynCorp, the
Virginia-based company which employs mainly "members of US
military elite units, or the CIA," as Marshall says. They used
the KDOM, which later became the Kosovo Verification Mission, for
espionage. Instead of doing the monitoring tasks assigned to them,
officers would go off and use their global positioning devices to
locate and identify targets which would be later bombed by Nato.
Quite how the Yugoslavs could allow 2,000 highly trained secret
service agents to roam around their territory is difficult to understand,
especially since, as Marshall shows, they knew perfectly well what
was going on.
The head of
the Kosovo Verification Mission was William Walker, the man deputed
to oust Manuel Noriega from power in Panama, and a former ambassador
to El Salvador whose US-supported government ran death squads. Walker
"discovered" the "massacre" at Racak in January
1999, the event which was used as a pretext for starting the process
which led to the bombing which began on 24th March. There is much
evidence to suggest that Racak was staged, and that the bodies found
were in fact those of KLA fighters, not civilians as was alleged.
What is certain is that Walkers role was so key that the country
road in Kosovo which leads to Racak has now been renamed after him.
Marshall writes that the date for the war spring 1999
was not only decided in late December 1998, but also that the date
was communicated to the KLA at the time. This means that when the
"massacre" occurred and when Madeleine Albright declared,
"Spring has come early," she was behaving rather like
Joseph Goebbels who, on hearing the news of the Reichstag fire in
1933, is supposed to have remarked, "What, already?"
At any rate,
when the KVM was withdrawn on the eve of the Nato bombing, Marshall
says that the CIA officers in it gave all their satellite phones
and GPS equipment to the KLA. "The KLA were being trained by
the Americans, partially equipped by them, and virtually given territory,"
Marshall writes even though he, like all other reporters,
helped propagate the myth of systematic Serb atrocities committed
against a totally passive Albanian civilian population.
The war went
ahead, of course, and Yugoslavia was ferociously bombed. But Miloevic
stayed in power. So London and Washington started what Marshall
happily calls "political warfare" to remove him. This
involved giving very large sums of money, as well as technical,
logistical and strategic support, and including arms, to various
"democratic opposition" groups and "non-governmental
organisations" in Serbia. The Americans were by then operating
principally through the International Republican Institute, which
had opened offices in neighbouring Hungary for the purpose of getting
rid of Slobodan Miloevic. "It was agreed" at one
of their meetings, Marshall explains, "that the ideological
arguments of pro-democracy, civil rights and a humanitarian approach
would be far more forceful if accompanied, if necessary, by large
bags full of money." These, and much else besides, were duly
shipped into Serbia through the diplomatic bags in many cases
of apparently neutral countries like Sweden who, by not participating
formally in the NATO war, were able to maintain full embassies in
Belgrade. As Marshall helpfully adds, "Bags of money had been
brought in for years." Indeed they had. As he earlier explains,
"independent" media outlets like the Radio Station B92
(who is Marshalls own publisher) were, in fact, very largely
funded by the USA. Organisations controlled by George Soros also
played a crucial role, as they were later to do, in 20034,
in Georgia. The so-called "democrats" were, in reality,
nothing but foreign agents just as the Yugoslav government
stolidly maintained at the time.
Marshall also
explains something which is now a matter of public record that it
was also the Americans who conceived the strategy of pushing forward
one candidate, Vojislav Kotunica, to unite the opposition.
Kotunica had the main advantage of being largely unknown by
the general public. Marshall then describes how the strategy also
involved a carefully planned coup détat, which duly
took place after the first round of the presidential elections.
He shows in minute detail how the principal actors in what was presented
on Western TV screens as a spontaneous uprising of "the people"
were, in fact, a bunch of extremely violent and very heavily armed
thugs under the command of the Mayor of the town of Cacak, Velimir
Ilic. It was Ilics 22 kilometre-long convoy carrying "weapons,
paratroopers and a team of kick boxers" to the federal parliament
building in Belgrade. As Marshall admits, the events of 5th October
2000 "looked more like a coup détat" than
the peoples revolution of which the worlds media so
naïvely gushed at the time.
3b. Georgia
2003
Many of the
tactics perfected in Belgrade were used in Georgia in November 2003
to overthrow President Edward Shevardadze. The same allegations
were made, and repeated ad nauseam, that the elections had been
rigged. (In the Georgian case, they were parliamentary elections,
in the Yugoslav case presidential.) Western media uncritically took
up these allegations, which were made long before the actual voting
took place. A propaganda war was unleashed against both presidents,
in Shevardnadzes case after a long period in which he had
been lionised as a great reformer and democrat. Both "revolutions"
occurred after a similar "storming of the parliament,"
broadcast live on TV. Both transfers of power were brokered by the
Russian minister, Igor Ivanov, who flew to Belgrade and Tbilisi
to engineer the exit from power of the incumbent president. Last
but not least, the US ambassador was the same man in both cases:
Richard Miles.
The most visible
similarity, however, came in the use of a student movement known
as Otpor (Resistance) in Serbia and Kmara (Its enough!) in
Georgia. Both movements had the same symbol, a black-on-white stencil
of a clenched fist. Otpor trained people from Kmara, and both were
supported by the US. And both organisations were ostensibly structured
along communist lines combining the appearance of a diffuse
structure of autonomous cells with the reality of highly centralised
Leninist discipline.
As in Georgia,
the role played by US money and covert operations has been revealed
but only after the event. During the events, the television
was full of wall-to-wall propaganda about how "the people"
rose up against Shevardnadze. All images which counteracted the
optimistic view were suppressed, or glossed over, such as the fact
that the "march on Tbilisi" led by Mihkail Saakashvili
started off in Gori, Stalins birthplace, beneath a statue
of the former Soviet tyrant who remains a hero to many Georgians.
The media was equally unconcerned when the new president, Saakashvili,
was confirmed in office by elections which awarded him the Stalinist
score of 96%.
3c. Ukraine
2004
In the case
of Ukraine, we observe the same combination of work by Western-backed
non-governmental organisations, the media and the secret services.
The non-governmental organisations played a huge role in de-legitimising
the elections before they occurred. Allegations of widespread fraud
were constantly repeated. In other words, the street protests which
broke out after the second round, which Yanukovich won, were based
on allegations which had been flying around before the beginning
of the first round. The main NGO behind these allegations, the Committee
of Ukrainian Voters, receives not one penny from Ukrainian voters,
being instead fully funded by Western governments. Its office was
decorated with pictures of Madeleine Albright and indeed the National
Democratic Institute was one of its main affiliates. It pumped out
constant propaganda against Yanukovich.
During the
events themselves, I was able to document some of the propaganda
abuses. They involved mainly the endless repetition of electoral
fraud practised by the government; the constant cover-up of fraud
practised by the opposition; the frenetic selling of Viktor Yushchenko,
one of the most boring men in the world, as a charismatic politician;
and the ridiculously unlikely story that he had been deliberately
poisoned by his enemies. (No prosecutions have been brought to date
on this.) The fullest account of the propaganda and fraud is given
by the British Helsinki Human Rights Groups report, "Ukraine
Clockwork Orange Revolution." An interesting explanation of
the role played by the
secret services was also given in The New York Times by C.
J. Chivers who explained that the Ukrainian KGB had been working
for Yushchenko all along in collaboration with the Americans
of course. Other important articles on the same subject include
Jonathan Mowats "The New Gladio in Action: Washingtons
New World Order Democratization Template," which
details how military doctrine has been adapted to effect political
change, and how various instruments, from psychology to bogus opinion
polls, are used in it. Mowat is particularly interesting on the
theories of Dr. Peter Ackermann, the author of Strategic
Non-Violent Conflict (Praeger, 1994) and of a speech entitled
"Between Hard and Soft Power: the Rise of Civilian-Based Struggle
and Democratic Change," delivered at the State Department in
June 2004. Mowat is also excellent on the psychology of crowds and
its use in these putsches: he draws attention to the role of "swarming
adolescents" and "rebellious hysteria" and traces
the origins of the use of this for political purposes to the Tavistock
Institute in the 1960s: that institute was created by the British
Army as its psychological warfare arm after World War I and its
illustrious alumni include Dr. David Owen, the former British Foreign
Secretary and Dr. Radovan Karadic, the former President of
the Bosnian Serb Republic. Mowat recounts how the ideas formulated
there by Fred Emery were taken up by one
Dr. Howard
Perlmutter, a professor of "Social Architecture'' at the
Wharton School, and a follower of Dr. Emery, (who) stressed that
"rock video in Katmandu," was an appropriate image of
how states with traditional cultures could be destabilized, thereby
creating the possibility of a "global civilization."
There are two requirements for such a transformation, he added,
"building internationally committed networks of international
and locally committed organizations,'' and "creating global
events" through "the transformation of a local event
into one having virtually instantaneous international implications
through mass-media.
Conclusion.
None of this
is conspiracy theory it is conspiracy fact. The United States
considers as a matter of official policy that the promotion of democracy
is an important element of its overall national security strategy.
Large sections of the State Department, the CIA, para-governmental
agencies like the National Endowment for Democracy, and government-funded
NGOs like the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, which
publishes several works on "democracy promotion." All
these operations have one thing in common: they involve the interference,
sometimes violent, of Western powers, especially the US, in the
political processes of other states, and that interference is very
often used to promote the quintessential revolutionary goal, regime
change.
July
21, 2009
John
Laughland's [send him
mail] latest book is A
History of Political Trials: From Charles I to Saddam Hussein.
Copyright
© 2009 John Laughland
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