“Standing armies shall in time be totally
abolished.”
– Immanuel Kant
“Till the people have risen / There’ll be
no decision.”
– The Coup
Ideally, George Katsiaficas’s work in favor of people’s
autonomy and liberation should need no introduction. A Fulbright fellow,
former student of Herbert Marcuse, and author of The Imagination of the New Left: A Global Analysis of
1968 (1987) and The Subversion of Politics: European Autonomous
Social Movements and the Decolonization of Everyday Life (2006), Katsiaficas
has over the past decade dedicated much of his energy to researching and
writing the first two volumes of Asia’s Unknown Uprisings, with the
first volume (2012) focusing on recent Korean history—in particular the 1980
Gwanju uprising, which Katsiaficas likens to the 1871 Paris Commune—and his
most recent publication, Volume 2, examining People’s Power
movements in nine other Asian countries: the Philippines, Tibet, Burma, China,
Nepal, Thailand, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Bangladesh. I saw
Katsiaficas present Volume 2 at the 2013 Bay Area Anarchist Bookfair—incidentally,
the event which PM Press successfully sought to have the volume published in
time for—and so am gladdened to now review the work. Volume 2 of Asia’s Unknown Uprisings examines a
series of explosive social movements in East and Southeast Asia of the
twentieth and early twenty-first centuries that are largely neglected in
Western circles, even among radicals—hence, “unknown” (though presumably not to
the millions who participated in them). One recurring principal theme of
the work, as in Katsiaficas’s previous writings, is the concept of the “eros
effect,” which he takes in part from his mentor Marcuse: that is, the sudden
eruption among participants in revolutionary movements of spontaneous, popular
decision-making processes, genuine solidarity and cooperation, and the
suspension of previously regnant social hierarchies.
Katsiaficas’s positive affect—seen clearly in his
presentation at the Anarchist Bookfair, the bloody repression to which nearly
every movement he studies was subjected notwithstanding—is well-reflected in
the beginning of the introductory chapter of the text, “A World of
Uprisings.” He there opens by making the obvious yet crucial claim that,
in historical terms, the “terrible, beautiful events” known as “uprisings occur
with astonishing regularity.” Their spontaneous nature speaks to the
revocability of instituted, oppressive social relations—the number of
dictatorships which were toppled in Asia through the 1980s and 1990s
(particularly in the period 1986-1992) demonstrates the concrete basis for believing
in the prospect of revolutionary processes. Waxing philosophical à la
Marx, Katsiaficas claims revolutionary behavior to be a “form of
species-constitutive behavior” for humans, happily noting that we are at
present “rapidly becoming self-conscious as a species.” The various
examples he examines in Volume 2 provide important opportunities for
contemplating the possibilities of inverting the brutal and grim future
promised by capital, using mass-direct action to transform society: Thai students’
heroic occupation of Thammasat University in 1973 to defy military rule
reportedly inspired Greek students to rise against the Papadopoulos
dictatorship by taking over the Athens Polytechnic, just as Eastern European
movements to precipitate the collapse of the Soviet Union consciously took
after the example provided by Chinese workers and students in and around
Tiananmen Square in 1989. Though the hegemonic direction in which many
‘post-dictatorial’ regimes have taken proves a more depressing story—as in post-Soviet
Russia, the collapse of many of the “crony capitalist” dictatorial regimes in
Asia have given way to neo-liberal domination by the international financial
institutions (IMF, World Bank, WTO) that many of these dictators’ successors
would come to welcome with open arms—Katsiaficas maintains that these various
social insurgencies were overwhelmingly of a popular, mass-democratic nature,
and so belong within the history of the New Left, a current that famously in
contradistinction to Leninism and Stalinism expressed confidence in the “wisdom
and intelligence” of ordinary people, and the importance of their spontaneity
in terms of advancing social change.
In general terms, the experiences of the East and Southeast
Asian democratization movements have served as embodiments of popular
self-management. The millions who in the nine countries Katsiaficas
investigates have struggled together radically for justice “can be regarded,”
notes the author, “as proof of another dynamic: [that] ordinary people, acting
together in the best interests of society, embody a reasonability and
intelligence far greater than that of elites which rules nation-states and
giant corporations.” Katsiaficas claims glowingly that the popular
revolutionary struggle is ever-increasingly radicalized by its historical
course—the people’s wisdom continually expands through each iteration of
insurgency, as they “refuse to tolerate previously accepted forms of
domination.”
People’s Power in the Philippines
In keeping with this positive affect—and presenting a prime
example of the radical power of the subordinated—Katsiaficas opens his series
of case studies with consideration of the various explosive manifestations of
“People’s Power” movement in the Philippines, which via mass-popular
intervention first helped depose the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos in
February 1986, and would return in two other major waves over the course of the
following twenty-five years. The original People’s Power movement of
1986—also known for the main roadway that was popularly occupied at the
movement’s height, effectively blocking the movement of Marcos’s tanks,
Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA)—was comprised of a multi-class nature,
with businesspeople and ordinary citizens alike uniting to remove Marcos from
power, following his arrogance in dismissing the results of the snap election
he was forced to concede in early 1986, one that he lost to fellow oligarch
Corey Aquino. EDSA 1, which brought millions out to the streets to
demonstrate against this final insult of Marcos’s—for an estimated 90 percent
of eligible voters participated in the election—was largely organized on the
common popularity of Catholicism as the people’s identity, with the Church
hierarchy involving itself explicitly in the struggle against Marcos.
Crucially, the victory of EDSA 1 arguably came only because of the considerable
extent to which both rank-and-file soldiers and military commanders defected
against Marcos’s repressive orders to brutally put down the people, and
specifically due to the efforts of the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM),
the nucleus of military rebels who first broke from Marcos, thus catalyzing his
downfall. In this sense, indeed, People’s Power 1 was not entirely a
non-violent event: RAM did use force to incapacitate the air-power of units
loyal to Marcos, and to take control of the TV station from which Marcos had
his new inauguration—i.e., his fall—transmitted. Katsiaficas hails the
February 1986 power transition as a seminal illustration of the power of those
from below to remake society, and he notes its importance as an inspiration for
similar developments which followed in due course in South Korea, Taiwan, and
Indonesia. However, he does note a number of limitations to the
transition of power: most centrally, People’s Power I effectively served
pro-Western interests in having Marcos replaced with opposition candidate
Aquino, who was herself an embodiment of the Filipino ruling class, a group
whose interests she represented well while in power. What is more, RAM
units were in constant contact with the CIA and U.S. government throughout the
tumultuous times which ended in Marcos’s departure: the CIA helped the rebels
coordinate their movements, in line with the US’s desire to see the crony
capitalism of Marcos give way to transnational liberalization.
Katsifiacas muses that perhaps the events could have taken a different course,
had the country’s once-powerful Communist movement not initially denounced the
February election as a sham, and had it not previously been crippled by a 1985
thousand-person purge executed by the New People’s Army (NPA).
Unfortunately—and unsurprisingly—Marcos’s ouster proved not
to be a social revolution, but rather a shuffling of power within the
pro-Western Filipino oligarchy; in this sense, the Communists were entirely and
presciently correct. Under Corey Aquino, the country’s “economic and
social structures” changed hardly at all: while she was forced to allow land
reform over some six million hectares in the country, she exempted an
additional two million from redistribution, as these belonged in part to her
family, as to those who effectively own the Philippines. Aquino was also
responsible for the Mendiola massacre, in which scores of landless peasants
were shot down for protesting her inadequate reforms, in addition to
mass-displacement resulting from the military operations she ordered, numerous
cases of torture, and outright repression of organized labor, with the overall
number of strikes falling after the frenetic activity taken to resist Marcos
dropping precipitously. None of this is to mention her facilitation of
the genesis of large-scale free-trade and export-processing zones (FTZ and EPZ)
in the country.
More positively, though, these years saw the shuttering of
two U.S. military bases on the archipelago, following a popular referendum
demanding this of the Aquino government. “People’s Power” returned in
2001, when crowds reportedly made up of largely professional, bourgeois
individuals—polls indicated at least two-thirds of those gathering in Manila to
have hailed “from the upper 10 percent of the class structure”—gathered at EDSA
to denounce the Senate’s decision to acquit then-president Ramos Estrada of
corruption charges, leading ultimately to a military coup in favor of Estrada’s
vice president, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Just days later, a larger agglomeration
comprised overwhelmingly of urban squatters—who in total by some estimates then
made up a full third of Manila’s population, amounting to some 2.5 million
people—organized to protect Estrada from arrest and, following his voluntary
surrender to the police, to keep vigil. This ESDA 3, known as “Poor
People Power,” met fierce repression as ordered by Arroyo, and did not enjoy
the support of the Church, capitalists, NGOs, or political parties, as in
1986. For this reason, Poor People Power was smashed, allowing Arroyo to
go on to embezzle money on orders of magnitude greater than Estrada had, to
employ death squads against various social activists, and obediently to further
enrich transnational capital and the established domestic oligarchy, while exacerbating
the poverty of the Filipino masses. The average number of strikes during
Arroyo’s rule dwindled to 39 per year, down from 308 in the 1986-1991 period,
and seven of ten farmers were found during her tenure to be landless. The
estimated percentage of underweight and stunted Filipino children remained
largely unchanged at the turn of the century, relative to the years following
Marcos’s fall.
In essence, despite the three examples of People’s Power
seen in the Philippines in the past decades, “the Filipino people have failed
to change significantly their social system,” writes Katsiaficas. Though
greatly revered, the 1986 uprising did little more than to essentially transfer
“power from one section of the pro-U.S. elite to another.” Nonetheless,
it would be questionable to hold the Filipina masses generally responsible for
the negating course of events since February 1986; moreover, one cannot deny
the very real demonstrative effect the legacy of People’s Power has had in the
region and world.
Extensive Military Repression in
Tibet and Burma
After investigating the recent history of People’s Power in
the Philippines, Katsiaficas turns to consideration of developments in Burma
and occupied Tibet (People’s Republic of China). In both cases,
autonomous, popular movements aiming at self-determination and social justice
have met with far more violent suppression than has been the case in the
Philippines. According to Katsiaficas’ statistics, Tibet and Burma are
the two countries in which the most people have been killed in uprisings, out
of the nine he considers in Volume 2.
In keeping with these data, the case of Tibet as recounted
by Katsiaficas is a decidedly negating one. The Tibetan people, who for
centuries have practiced Buddhism and lived in conditions denounced by the
Chinese State as “feudal,” have suffered immeasurably during the sixty-plus
year occupation which began with invasion by Maoist forces after the Chinese
Communist Party’s (CCP) victory over the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1949. An
estimated one-fifth of the overall Tibetan population, or one million people,
have died as a result of the ongoing PRC occupation of Tibet, which accounts
for one-fourth of China’s landmass and supplies nearly fall of its mineral
wealth, in addition to containing uranium deposits as well potentially as
untapped oil. The first major uprising against Chinese rule in Tibet
started on 10 March 1959, when after hearing of threats to the life of Tenzin
Gyatso, the Dalai Lama, tens of thousands of Tibetans rallied to protect him in
his summer palace, the Norbulingka, near Lhasa. Besides physically
blocking the Chinese from access to the Dalai Lama, the crowds demanded
independence from the Maoist invaders, a position which would officially be
taken up by the formal leadership in the following days. During the tense
standoff, Tenzin Gyatso famously and surreptitiously escaped from the palace,
fleeing to exile in India.
Just days after the Dalai Lama’s flight, the Chinese
military employed artillery and armed-personnel carriers against the crowd
assembled at the Norbulingka, immediately killing between 5,000 and 10,000
people, and imprisoning ten thousand others, a full one-fourth of Lhasa’s
populace. Repression in that year was fierce, with the Chinese military
itself estimating it killed 87,000 Tibetans in the highland’s central region
between 1959 and 1960. The occupation forces notoriously and
systematically destroyed a great number of the Tibetans’ religious spaces, with
PRC data on Tibetan monasteries showing there to have existed 2,700 before
1959, 550 seven years later, and merely 8 by the early 1980s. With the
Sino-Soviet split, moreover, Tibet’s lands were mandated to cultivate grains,
leading multitudes to starve as crops failed due in no small part to lack of
local familiarity with the foreign crop; what is more, clandestine CIA support
for Tibet was ended with the normalization of U.S.-China relations after Nixon’s
1969 meeting with Mao. The years 1987 to 1989 saw a number of
mobilizations led by Tibetan monks which met with fierce repression by Chinese
authorities, who as always claimed “reaction” and “imperialism” to motivate
such mobilizations, despite the fact that monks imprisoned during these actions
themselves famously released a manifesto on the “Precious Democratic
Constitution of Tibet” which stipulated that the Tibetan people did not for
their future desire a return to “our former condition,” with a “restoration of
serfdom or […] the so-called ‘old system’ of rule by a succession of feudal
masters or monastic estates.” Surprisingly or unsurprisingly, it was Hu
Jintao who imposed martial law in Tibet in 1989, a move that would “restore
order” by means of various massacres, mass-arrests, and razings of temples; in
this sense he was prepared well for his 2002 ascension to CCP Chairman.
Hunger strikes among Tibetans would continue through the 1990s, while in 2008
the brutal suppression of Tibetan monks’ observation of National Uprising Day
(10 March) demanding release of imprisoned colleagues resulted, as is
well-known, in large-scale attacks on Han Chinese properties and persons in the
occupied territories, leading in turn to more mass-arrests and beatings of
ordinary Tibetans. As Katsiaficas notes, the region of Tibet today has
more Han Chinese (7.5 million) than indigenous Tibetans (6 million); sadly for
this reason, writes Katsiaficas, “Tibetans’ claims to special rights over their
lands are rapidly becoming similar to those of Native Americans inside the
United States.” While their modern experience with Chinese
settler-colonialism has undoubtedly proven highly destructive, the indigenous
Tibetans’ egalitarian and non-materialist ethos, in Katsiaficas’ view, could
perhaps contribute well to the ongoing struggle “to create a world free of
weapons of mass destruction, a world where all forms of life are
respected.” It is not for nothing, claims the author, that the Tiananmen
Square movement in China followed so soon after the Tibetans’ mobilizations in
the late 1980s.
Similarly brutal in breadth and scope to the occupation of
Tibet has been the Burmese military’s prolonged strategy of crushing autonomous
social developments in the territory it calls Myanmar. The country’s
early post-independence history, made possible through the armed struggle
coordinated by Aung San to defeat Japanese and British colonizers, saw
parliamentary rule on the one hand as well as the continuation of armed
struggle by the various ethnic minorities of Burma, who comprise a third of the
population, on the other. Formal military rule began in the country in
1962 with Ne Win’s suspension of parliament, a move that met thereafter with
various student and worker resistance actions. Ne Win eventually resigned
following an intense wave of popular demonstrations in March 1988, ranging from
university occupations to insurrectional destruction of State property and
street battles against the police and military. Most spectacular was the
coordinated general strike of 8 August 1988 (8/8/88), a day that marked the
fiftieth anniversary of the Burmese year 1300 (1938), when nationalist forces
revolted against the British: to protest the effective continuation of Ne Win’s
administration following his form deposition, the day began at precisely 8:08am, when dockworkers
suspended their labor, soon to be joined by millions of others in a
carnival-esque atmosphere that overtook Rangoon.
The celebratory power of the people made evident on that day
ended with negation, as the military applied what may be termed the “Tlatelolco
solution”[1] in
finally opening fire indiscriminately and en masse against the
people, killing hundreds and arresting thousands. A war then broke out
between people and State which raged for four days, during which the Army
“routinely turned automatic weapons on any public gathering”—even those of
assembled nurses, demanding the suspension of shoot-to-kill orders.
Nonetheless, Ne Win’s successor followed his boss’s example by resigning three
days into the revolts, and with the suspension of martial law soon thereafter,
the people were left in many cases to temporarily manage society for themselves
through strike committees, assemblies, and popular security bodies while waiting
for the promised multiparty elections to be held. However, the military
stifled the transition to liberal democracy by once again seizing control, this
time via the badly named State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), which
systematically worked to dismember the autonomous processes which had begun to
develop in Burmese society: thousands were murdered and thousands more
imprisoned in this “Iron Fist” or “Thermidorean” phase of the struggle.
Besides overt brute force, the State reportedly and infamously distributed
heroin to shatter the opposition after 1988, much as the authorities had
resorted to “liberating” violent criminals from prison in 1988, in order to
besiege the acephalous popular resistance. Mirroring the situation in
Mexico with the development of the Fuerzas de Liberacion Nacional (FLN) and
similar groups after the 1968 Tlatelolco massacre, many Burmese student
radicals took to the mountains to train for guerrilla warfare against the
regime following their experiences with its brutal violence in 1988.
Strict repression followed the SPDC’s consolidation of power
in 1988, with the results of the overwhelming electoral victory of Aung San Suu
Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) in the 1990 elections[2] entirely
dismissed by the ruling junta. The “predatory State” overseen by the SPDC
has greatly enriched itself in this period (1988-present), selling off its
natural resources and developing lucrative ties with China and Thailand, while
maintaining the vast majority of the populace in highly impoverished
conditions. Instead of serving as a “developmental State”—as in South
Korea, for example—the SPDC has followed it own desires to maintain and
aggrandize power, cutting deals with certain ethnic minorities while subjecting
others—like the Karen—to brutal campaigns of subjugation. One estimate
cited by Katsiaficas claims 3000 villages destroyed and a million people displaced
during these ethnic-cleansing operations. The 2008 “Saffron Revolution,”
largely led by monks, is framed with some skepticism by Katsiaficas, who
mentions the reported ties between the National Endowment for Democracy and
these mobilizations. The author also takes issue with Burmese chauvinism
and Suu Kyi’s strict pacifism in particular, which condemn the militant tactics
of the Karen and others, who have had to use violence to survive various
military onslaughts by the State since formal independence; oddly enough, he
does not discuss the Rohingya Muslims, whose recent plight at the hands of the
Burmese Buddhist majority Suu Kyi certainly has not prioritized.
With thousands of political prisoners still incarcerated, Katsiaficas suggests
that the Burmese movements’ inability to do away with military control may well
have to do with their general hesitancy to resort to more forceful methods.
Proletarian and Student
Counter-Power in China: Tiananmen Square and After
“But history’s final accounting has yet to be completed.”
– Autonomous workers’ wall poster, 1989
In introducing the world-historical 1989 revolt in China,
Katsiaficas emphasizes that the movements which comprised it emanated entirely
from outside the Chinese Communist Party (CCP): first, proletarians, then
students, and finally “nearly the entire population” of Beijing became involved
in the rebellion, particularly after 20 May 1989, when the army deployed to
suppress the uprising. The two main constituent forces of the protests,
workers and students, were directed by no centralized leadership but instead
organized through large autonomous agglomerations—a structure that mirrored the
geographical parameters of the 1989 revolt, which beyond Beijing expanded to an
estimated 341 of the 434 large cities of China. Though protestors
expressed a diversity of views on the country’s political future, few if any of
them held positive views of capitalism. Indeed, especially from
proletarian angles, the 1989 mobilizations embodied a resounding condemnation
of Deng Xiaoping’s pro-capitalist reforms, and the brutal social inequality,
which followed in tandem. The popular esteem in which the “Hundred
Million Heroes” of 1989 are held is well-deserved: Katsiaficas frames the
shattering interventions of that year as continuing from the Chinese people’s
popular involvement in politics after the 1949 defeat of the KMT (as before):
the Maoist Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, a “mobilization of civil
society against the state bureaucracy,” on Katsiaficas’s account expressed the
masses’ dissatisfaction with dominant anti-egalitarian practices, as had
peasants’ insurrections previously—the White Lotus rebellion (1796-1801), or
the Taiping revolt of the 1860s. Moreover, among the Han Chinese, says
Katsiaficas, there is a general sense that “the Emperor ruled through a mandate
of heaven (which could be retracted if power was wielded in unjust ways), that
the people have the right to petition for redress of grievances and officials a
concomitant responsibility to respond intelligently, and that everyone has the
right to rebel against unjust dictates.”
In economic terms, it would seem that the exceedingly high
inflation rates seen in China in 1988-1989 contributed to popular
dissatisfaction with the state of affairs, as did the passage of a series of
laws favoring management over labor in previous years. The 1989 events
themselves began on 15 April 1989, when workers initiated protest in Tiananmen
Square to mourn the death of Hu Yaobang, former CCP General Secretary.
Indeed, Katsiaficas notes that while the Tiananmen Square events are generally
thought of in the main (or, at least in Western circles) as having been led
students, in fact students comprised a small minority (2 million) of the total
population of workers (105 million) who spearheaded many of the mobilizations
seen in April to June 1989. In particular, the Beijing Autonomous Workers
Federation (BAWF) was born from public challenges directed by workers against
the corruption practiced among the Party elite and the numerous adverse effects
of Xiaoping’s liberalization policies. Alongside the BAWF and other
radical workers, the Autonomous Student Union of Beijing Universities (ASU) was
founded during this time, requesting permission from the State to publish
independent newspapers, and demanding that the CCP open itself to transparency
and questioning on charges of corruption. In this way, the BAWF and ASU
explicitly challenged the CCP’s hegemony on dictation of social policy—and
gained the hatred of hardline Party insiders. In response to these
autonomous developments, on 26 April the China People’s Daily condemned
“anti-state turmoil and chaos” associated with a “conspiracy by a handful of
unlawful elements”; that same day, the CCP banned public protests.
Nonetheless, the very next day some 150,000 people defied the ban by occupying
Tiananamen Square.This ongoing show of power led certain groups within the CCP
to open negotiations with officially sanctioned sectors of protestors;
meanwhile, worker and student activists consulted popularly with each other,
and with their predecessors from previous generations, leading “a hundred
flowers of ideas” to bloom. A small subgroup of students decided in
mid-May to engage in hunger strike while occupying Tiananmen Square, thus
preventing the official visit planned by Mikhail Gorbachev to the Square,
during what was to be the first international meeting in decades between
representatives of the two members of the ex-Sino-Soviet alliance.
Katsiaficas observes here that the hunger-striking students gained a great deal
of public sympathy for their radical tactics, yet he condemns them for
anti-democratic arrogance and egotism in their rejection of compromise—a “huge
strategic error” that he questionably holds responsible for provoking the
violent repression of the State just weeks later. During the month of
May, on the other hand, the BAWF expanded and developed its public presence, calling
for a “higher form of socialism” in which the bureaucratic CCP would be
abolished, replaced by collective proletarian and popular association. At
the other pole, psychology graduate student and hunger striker Chai Ling
declared herself “Commander-in-Chief of the Headquarters for Defending
Tiananmen Square,” leading to palpable tensions between students and workers,
as the former isolated themselves from the latter, even refusing their
participation and collaboration in the Square’s occupation. It is no surprise,
then, that many proletarians came to perceive many of the same “corrupt
practices of the elite, such as secrecy, exclusivity, factionalism, struggles
for power, and special privileges” as holding sway among many students.
Beyond consideration of effective class struggle within the oppositional
movements, the two groups diverged moreover on political philosophy, with
students generally calling for reform of the CCP and offering few critiques of
the ongoing opening to capitalism as facilitated by the bureaucracy, while
workers “wanted revolution.” Unfortunately, neither movement found much
support from the Chinese countryside, where agricultural workers had not yet
felt the deleterious impacts of nascent neoliberalism.
Less than a week after the beginning of the hunger strike,
in which over three thousand people came to be involved, Deng Xiaoping declared
martial law, and the Party General Secretary Zhao Ziyang, who had previously
expressed sympathy for the protests, was deposed by internal coup, with Li Peng
taking over to impose the martial-law order. However, the BAWF called for
a general strike on 20 May to blockade the mass-entrance of troops into
Beijing, and, as in the Philippines, the people’s peaceful occupation of the
streets prevented the army’s expeditious dismantling of the Tiananmen Square
occupation. Troops themselves initially refused to use force against the
people, as hundreds of cities throughout the PRC erupted in protest.
Numerous autonomous worker, intellectual, and student groups arose in the
tempest, encouraged on by the BAWF, which on 26 May openly advocated the
“storm[ing of] this twentieth-century Bastille, this last stronghold of
Stalinism!” However, the Tiananmen Square occupation soon began to
dissipate with the prolongation of martial law, until the full military
invasion of central Beijing during the night of 3 June, which was met with
substantial resistance from the people, who erected barricades and threw stones
and Molotovs to stave off the incursion. Following the military takeover
of Tiananmen Square in the early morning of 4 June, the people of Beijing
revolted radically, surrounding and blockading troop deployments and beating
soldiers, recuperating arms for self-defense, and destroying hundreds of police
and military vehicles. Reportedly, a significant proportion of commanders
and lower-ranking soldiers refused to implement the CCP’s demands for
suppression, instead fighting pro-State units engaged in the repression of the
people. Nonetheless, these military rebels were a minority, and the army
overall remained “firmly under the control of the government,” which besides
mandating severe repression in the proletarian districts of Beijing, also had
thousands of activists imprisoned. Official reports spoke of 300 soldiers
and citizens killed in the repression operation, with 7,000 injured.
Similarly to many other observers, Katsiaficas situates the
brutal suppression of 1989 within the CCP’s conscious strides towards an
increasingly authoritarian-capitalist model for Chinese society, which has
greatly enriched Party insiders themselves. From 1980 to 1996, real
economic growth rates in China averaged nearly 10 percent, while from 1997 to
2006 they ranged between 7.8 and 11.1 percent. Within this process, the
CCP has availed itself of the industrial exploitation of the massive “pool of
semiskilled rural emigrants” once residing outside the country’s
megalopolises—now encouraged en masse to perform effective
slave labor in the cities—as well as of the “imperial exploitation of Xinjiang
and Tibet’s vast mineral and oil deposits and their people’s labor.”
While unfortunate developments such as the seemingly ceaseless usurpation of
territory for capitalist megaprojects and the overwhelming support granted by
most Han to repressive policies in Tibet and Xinjiang mar China’s present,
still the peoples’ degree of “resistance to unjust authority remains a
significant feature of the political landscape,” as well as a promise of
alternative, more humane futures: the estimated number of “incidents of social
unrest” experienced in China in 2008 reached 100,000, up from 40,000 at the
turn of the millennium.
Radical Struggles Within Monarchies:
Nepal and Thailand
Besides consideration of the Philippines, PRC (and Tibet),
and Burma, Katsiaficas importantly includes examinations of mass-revolutionary
struggle within the monarchical regimes of Thailand and Nepal. Such
mobilizations have arguably had greater successes in Nepal, where the monarchy
has been abolished and Maoists assert a considerable voice in governance, than
in the thoroughly neo-liberal Thailand, which still retains King Bhumibol.
Nepal experienced a parliamentary period beginning with the
fall of Rana dynastic rule in 1951 and ending with the imposition of direct
royal rule in 1960. For Katsiaficas, the first most significant popular
movement against monarchical absolutism came in the form of the jana
andolan (“People’s Uprising” or “Movement”) of 1990, a seven-week
struggle between February and April that was initiated by political parties in
favor of the restoration of parliament and in turn carried in far more radical
directions by the Nepali masses themselves. In Patan, across the river
from Kathmandu, the people in arms expelled the police, declaring the city a
“Free State” and “Zone of Democracy.” As in Korea and China previously,
it was the urban poor (lumpenproletariat) and workers who helped sustain
the jana andolan amidst repression meted out by the king’s
security forces, though the movement in its inception was largely
impelled by more middle-class elements. With nearly a half million
participating in an April 6 bandh(general strike) in
Kathmandu—amounting to a third of the city’s population—the jana
andolanexperienced a dramatic intensification in the face of indiscriminate
police gunfire, leading two days later to the king conceding a restoration of
parliament, and a transition to prajatantra (formal
democracy). This transition was unsurprisingly negotiated in an exclusive
manner, with no measures stipulated for the release of the thousands of
political prisoners or justice for those shot dead by the royal forces—an
estimated thousand individuals, overwhelmingly youth.
Though the beginning of prajatantra in
Nepal could not be said to have brought about social transformation, this “new
opening” gave succor to the hopes of the considerable numbers of “the less
privileged” in the country, claims Katsiaficas. He notes with
enthusiasm the the resounding activation-effect the popular struggle of 1990
struggle had on the multiplicities of peoples comprising Nepali civil society,
from workers to Dalits and females mobilizing in defense of their rights.
He explains that diverse groups of subjugated ethnicities collaborated in
efforts to attain a secular society, overturn the caste system, and abolish the
Hindu monarchy after the first jana andolan—these goals
being formulated either despite or because of the November 1990 Nepali
constitution, which upheld monarchical rule and mandated elections that would
come to be dominated by the Congress Party, largely comprised of Brahmins, with
the Communist Party of Nepal (CPN) gaining a plurality.
Katsiaficas examines another famous Nepali resistance
movement in the guerrilla tactics of the country’s armed Maoists (CPNM), seeing
their growing popularity as coinciding with the overwhelming disappointment
experienced by the most oppressed of Nepal following the coming of bourgeois
parliamentarism. The Maoist insurgency began in February 1996; within a
decade, it would retake control from the monarchy of a whole half of Nepal’s
countryside. As in India, the site of the original 1967 Naxalbari
movement and the ongoing Naxalite resistance to neoliberal terror, the Nepali
Maoists have gained great support from many of the rural poor, who welcome the
insurgents’ redistribution of occupied lands and suspension of peasant debt and
bonded labor. As in several other geographical examples—for example,
Nicaragua, Mexico, Colombia—the Maoists have met with brutality at the hands of
the U.S.-supported Royal Nepalese Army (RNA), with thousands murdered,
disappeared, and imprisoned. Indeed, the putative “Maoist threat” was the
pretext for King Gyanendra’s 2005 declaration of martial law (following from
his 2002 suspension of parliament), a repressive move that itself catalyzed the
second jana andolan (April 2006), the loktantra
andolan (“true people’s democracy”). This movement, which
brought more than half of the total population of Kathmandu (1 million) and
four million others elsewhere in the country (total population 25 million) into
the streets on a sustained bandh, coordinated well with the Maoist
armed struggle, which blockaded Kathmandu and made considerable gains against
the RNA. The people’s tenacity in desiring the fall of the regime
sustained the 19-day struggle, met as it was with indiscriminate police
violence until Gyanendra’s capitulation to reinstate parliament, and the
parliament’s subsequent formal abolition of monarchical rule and its
declaration of Nepal as a secular republic (May 2006).
For Katsiaficas, Nepal’s two jana andolan serve
as a strong example of “the incredible heroism of ordinary people”:amidst
police and State violence, they united en masse to topple
oppressive power. Nonetheless, it is unclear whether the participants of
the loktantra andolan as a whole desired the outright
abolition of monarchical rule rather than the resignation of Gyanendra, as
Katsiaficas suggests that many of the people of Nepal in fact now advocate the
restoration of monarchy—just not in Gyanendra’s person. The author
concludes by favorably discussing the progressive social changes instituted by
Maoist insurgency in Nepal’s recent history, implicitly questioning to what degree
a return to parliamentary rule—even with the Maoist majority represented in
2008—will prove efficacious in overturning inequality and mass impoverishment.
In Thailand, another long-living monarchy has enjoyed
widespread popular support even through two bloody uprisings of the late
twentieth century (1973 and 1992); Katsiaficas describes the country in this
sense as an outlier, with the “king hold[ing] the status of demigod,” and the
Thai people’s “allegiance to the royal family [being] one of their most
defining cultural characteristics.” Bhumibol, the grandson of
Chulalongkorn who has ruled since 1947, is widely regarded as the world’s
wealthiest monarch; his estimated worth of $35 billion clearly outstrips the
accumulated fortunes of Saudi King Abdullah and Sheikh Khaifa of the UAE.
In part, the monarchy owes at least some of its vast wealth to its
collaboration in the mid-1960s with U.S. forces prosecuting genocide in
neighboring Vietnam, through its renting out of airstrips and servicing of bases.
Growing alongside Bhumibol’s hegemony has been the Thai military, which like
the monarchy has taken every opportunity to enrich itself, and so perpetuate
the gross social inequality seen in Thailand.
On Katsiaficas’ account, the first major challenge to the
feudal-military establishment came with students’ mobilizations in October
1973. Influenced in no small part by contemporary global upsurges and the
propagation of New Left critiques of existing society, members of the National
Student Center of Thailand (NSCT) coordinated participatory meetings to shutter
Bangkok universities and plan the “Day of Joy” (13 October 1973), the largest
single protest in Thai history (with the participation of an estimated
half-million), which would at once demonstrate the protestors’ allegiance to
“Nation, Religion, King, and Constitution” as well as call for the reversal of
the military’s 1971 takeover via elections. Protests continued on early
the morning of October 14, when police fired on crowds gathered near the royal
palace who had refused to disperse; next came the direct intervention of the
military, using tanks to suppress the popular rising. Protestors then
came to split between pacifists and direct actionists, with the latter taking
on the task of destroying specific targets such as police stations, the Revenue
Department, and the Anti-Corruption Center. By continuing to
mobilize en masse even after the beginning of open repression,
the urban dissident movement forced the hand of Bhumibol, who demanded the
resignation and exile of the junta’s top leaders. Just three years later,
though, he called them back to the country, inviting the military yet again to
take power and crush the developing confidence of the youth and workers once
and for all—thus intensifying the violence Bhumibol had unleashed against them
through paramilitary groups in the intervening three-year period. The
same day the armed forces brutally attacked Bangkok’s Thammasat University to
repress student counter-power (6 October 1976), they officially retook power in
a coup. With the military back in the seat, Thai labor militancy dropped
off sharply, and the foreign capitalists who just before the students’ massacre
had refused to invest, out of fear losing money due to the prominence of ongoing
autonomous social developments in the country, happily suspended their
strike. In parallel terms, the option of Maoist armed struggle in the
Thai countryside gained traction among many, particularly students.
The return of military rule in Thailand greatly facilitated
the State’s embrace of neoliberalism, with consistently high economic growth rates,
an expanding middle class, and super-exploited working classes (the workplace
injury rate in Thailand for 1995 was three times greater than that calculated
for South Korea). A major pro-democracy uprising in May 1992 resulted in
the fall of General Suchinda, then Prime Minister, despite the scores shot dead
and arrested in the suppression of the rural and urban mobilizations as ordered
by the general—an act for which he was pardoned by the king. As in
several other case studies he examines, Katsiaficas notes again that the
workers and poor comprised the main force sustaining the popular mobilizations
and civil defense once the Thai army began overt repression—with the more
privileged elements of protestors often quickly making themselves scarce under
such conditions. The 1992 transition brought parliamentary elections,
greater foreign direct investment, and a new constitution (1997) which provided
limited formal protections for women, while unsurprisingly leaving the
overhanging structure of capitalist exploitation untouched. Out of the
democratic opening came visible organizing by queers and the birth of the
Assembly of the Poor (AOP), affiliated with La Via Campesina. Katsiaficas
seems to find more promise in the AOP and related groups than in either of the
factions which have have dominated the country’s politics through conflict in
these past years: the Yellow Shirts, who emphasize Buddhist principles and
monarchical supremacy in government, and the Red Shirts, or supporters of the
populist-neoliberal billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, who was overthrown in a
coup in 2006 after being popularly elected twice (2001 and 2005). Despite
his wealth, Thaksin seemingly enjoys the sympathies of many Thai proletarians,
whose April-May 2010 occupation of central Bangkok, including the city’s
financial center—a protest in support of their beleaguered leader—met with
great violence at the hands of the military.
Other Authoritarian,
Pro-Western Regimes: Taiwan, Indonesia, Bangladesh
Katsiaficas also discusses three more countries shaken by
uprisings: Taiwan, Indonesia, and Bangladesh. Due to space
considerations, I will here only briefly explore these case studies: in Taiwan,
awarded by the Allies to the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) government of China after
Japan’s defeat in August 1945, indigenous residents of the island called for
independence in 1947, mobilizing armed struggle toward this end and assembling
themselves politically in councils, only to meet the fascist repression of the
KMT in that year and then especially following its defeat by the CCP in 1949,
when the KMT leadership fled to Taiwan, there to found the world’s
longest-running regime based on martial law. Up to 30,000 indigenous
Taiwanese were murdered by the KMT in its assertion of dominance. Formal
democratization began in 1987 with the KMT’s suspension of martial law,
following from widespread protests from workers, environmentalists, and upper
middle-class liberals, and accelerated with the coming of elections in
1991. Despite parliamentary rule, Taiwan retains strong military ties
with the U.S., an alliance that arguably diverts great resources from the
peoples of Taiwan to needless waste.
In Indonesia, longstanding “sultanist” President Mohammed
Suharto was compelled to resign in 1998 amidst popular mobilization against the
conditions stipulated by an IMF bailout aiming at stabilizing the country’s
economy following the 1997 financial crisis. Suharto initially rejected
the IMF’s conditions, and subsequently dawdled on implementing them after finally
caving, out of fear of public reaction—particularly in terms of the mandated
cuts to food subsidies, with the rapid increase in poverty rates coming in the
wake of the 1997 crisis. After Suharto’s resignation, catalyzed as it was
by student occupations of parliament, youth and workers continued to mobilize
by the thousands to protest the military’s central role in Indonesian politics,
with elections coming the following year. Dialectically, while East
Timorese gained independence from the new government through a referendum,
Suharto’s authoritarian legacy lived on, even given this break: paramilitary
groups supported by the Indonesian army engaged in widespread massacres of
Timorese during and after the 1999 declaration of independence. Unlike
East Timor, though, Aceh and West Papua have so far not been allowed either
independence or autonomy.
The struggle in Bangladesh against the pro-U.S. dictatorship
of General H.M. Ershad (1982-1990) saw intervention by students and government
workers on hartal (strike), in addition to sympathetic
elements of the military, cooperating to bring about parliamentary rule, which
instituted the rule of law, freedom of expression, and legalization of trade
unions. However, and unsurprisingly, the representatives of the new
parliament in large part hailed from the business and middle classes, with
dozens of owners of garment factories and slave-traffickers winning
office. Mobilizations by women, especially female sex workers, against
patriarchal Islamist mores have become important features of the
post-dictatorial landscape in Bangladesh, as has the class struggles of garment
workers, who have suffered enormously from unsafe working conditions on the one
hand—recall the April 2013 Rana Square disaster, or the November 2012 Tazreen
fire—and the British-trained anti-unionist Rapid Action Battalion (RAB)
paramilitary group on the other. It is strange that Katsifiacias makes no
mention of the devastation wrought on Bangladesh and its peoples by the
ever-worsening cyclones and rising sea levels exacerbated by capitalism’s
warming of the atmosphere, a development that has led many coastal Bangladeshi
communities to effectively lose access to safe drinking water, as
the ocean’s salt penetrates the aquifers on which they could once rely.
Concluding Comments
“By their very nature, humans are destined to be
free.” – G.W.F. Hegel
Following the end of his explorations of the history of
uprisings in these nine Asian societies, Katsiaficas dedicates the remainder of
his volume to reflections on these events. He enthusiastically welcomes
them all as reminders that “human beings remain capable of changing the planetary
structures that condemn millions of people to living hell at the periphery of
the world system—and involve us all in continual wars and destruction of the
planet.” Though he recognizes that the exercise of People’s Power over
the past three decades has more often than not ended up facilitating increased
super-exploitation by transnational capital, he declares it as amounting to “a
protracted people’s uprising against capitalism and war,” one developed
autonomously from overarching centralizing forces. In this way, the
popular spontaneity evinced in the nine countries he studies should
definitively disprove the Leninist thesis of the need to insert externally
imposed, vanguardist discipline onto the putatively reformist masses. The
“ultimate goal” of People’s Power, says Katsifiacas, has been “the
institutionalization of popular forms of decision-making—taking power from
elites and reconstituting it into grassroots forms.” He declares that in
the numerous cases in which the “eros effect” has gripped popular
mobilizations, “humans’ love for and solidarity with each other suddenly
replace previously dominant values and norms,” recalling the “primitive
communism” of prehistorical humanity. As in the examples of the Paris and
Gwanju Communes, the historical example of People’s Power “contradict[s] the
widely propagated myth that human beings are essentially evil and therefore
require strong governments to maintain order and justice. Rather, the
behavior of the citizens during these moments of liberation [have] revealed an
innate capacity for self-government and cooperation.” Turning to
consideration of what it is that might be done today, Katsifiacias urges people
in general to act to “negate their existing daily routines and break free of
ingrained patterns” so as to realize a globalized eros effect, which, if
“continually activated,” would finally afford humanity the chance to “determine
for [ourselves] the type of society in which [we] wish to live.”
Katsiaficas concludes his massive study with the chapter “The
System is the Problem,” wherein he identifies eight negating structural
imperatives of the present capitalist-military system: wars and weapons,
bubbles and busts, billionaires and beggars, and profits and pollution.
He clearly notes that this system, which he claims to bear a “great deal of
continuity” with those of the Axis powers of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan,
owes its existence to imposition “by the power of the strongest, by the dead
weight of the past, and decidedly not [to] the life forces of the
present.” Against the present “abysmal reality,” Katsifiacias invokes
“global revolutionary change” as a “prescriptive remedy [which is] needed in
large doses to cure the diseases of militarized nation-states, power-hungry
politicians, and wealth-grabbing billionares”; in positive terms, he suggests a
“fundamental restructuring of the world system to decentralize and bring under
self-management the vast social wealth of humanity,” as continuing in the
heroic examples examined in Asia’s Unknown Uprisings, Volume 2.
Optimistically, he promises that “[t]he next generations of protests—drawn from
the trajectory of Chiapas, Caracas, Gwanju, Berlin, Seattle, February 15, 2003,
and the Arab Spring [sic]—will surpass these other waves in a cascading
global resonance.”
There can be no doubt of the imperative nature of
Katsiaficas’s argumentation as presented in this book; I can easily say it is
one of the most stimulating books I have read in years, or perhaps in
life. I would merely end by interrogating Katsiaficas’s triumphant
optimism, which reminds me of that of Ernst Bloch, author of the Principle
of Hope (3 volumes). For example, Katsiaficas at no point
in Volume 2 discusses the capitalist system’s clearly
established suicidal (omnicidal) proclivities, represented most graphically in
the ever-accelerating climate crisis, and hence ignores the utter need for
sustained interventions like those examined in the text on these grounds—with
the difference that the present and future uprisings serve as the midwives of
post-capitalist social relations, rather than of liberal capitalism (or
capitalist parliamentarism) in opposition to direct military rule. This
is not a point of major disagreement between Katsifiacias and me, for he
clearly interprets the present crisis as one of “greatest urgency,” and calls
for “[g]lobally synchronized struggles by hundreds of millions”—if not
billions—of people to displace capitalism from the stage of history. The
only point I would stress is that the timeline for such mass-radical action is
necessarily short, in keeping with current climatological findings, and that
the dénouement of the crises of capitalism may not necessarily yield a
liberated, humanist future—though it still might, as the promise of People’s
Power holds.
Javier
Sethness Castro is author of Imperiled Life:
Revolution against Climate Catastrophe and For a Free Nature: Critical Theory,
Social Ecology, and Post-Developmentalism. His essays and articles have
appeared in Truthout, Climate and Capitalism, Dissident Voice, MRZine,
Countercurrents, and Perspectives on Anarchist Theory. He is currently working
on writing a political and intellectual biography of Herbert Marcuse.
[1] A
reference to the 2 October 1968 Tlatelolco massacre committed by the Mexican
Army and the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) against students and
non-students as they held a rally at the Plaza de Las Tres Culturas in Mexico
City, just over two weeks before the beginning of the Olympics in the
city. An estimated 300 people lost their lives in the balacero (sustained
shooting), though other estimates suggest far more. Countless student
activists were imprisoned at the site of the massacre as well, many of them
forcibly disappeared. See La Noche de Tlatelolco by
Elena Poniatowska.
[2] To
clarify: these 1990 elections had been mandated by the Burmese parliament,
which met briefly in 1988 following the fall of Sein Lwin, successor to Ne
Win. The SPDC military in fact did observe this parliamentary legal
demand, however little attention it paid to the result of the event it called
for. by JAVIER SETHNESS CASTRO
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