Olympic Hurdles
Whoever becomes the master of a city accustomed to freedom, and does not destroy it, may expect to be destroyed himself; because, when there is a rebellion, such a city justifies itself by calling on the name of liberty and its ancient institutions, never forgotten despite the passing of time and the the benefits received from the new ruler. Whatever the conqueror’s actions or foresight, if the inhabitants are not dispersed and scattered, they will forget neither that name nor those institutions; and at the first opportunity they will at once have recourse to them, as did Pisa after having been kept in servitude for a hundred years by the Florentines.
--Niccolo Machiavelli
China is the land of the peasant revolt, numerous small scale insurgencies spread over the land of a billion people, dealt with by compulsion and compromise and done relatively efficiently for state of its size.
A half century ago, Tibetans revolted against Communist Chinese rule. The revolt was crushed, and the Dalai Lama found himself opening the wisdom eye to Hollywood stars from exile in India and lecture halls around the world.
The Chinese have made major efforts to Sinify Tibet since its conquest, encouraging a settlement policy in these occupied territories that makes Israel's efforts in the West Bank and Gaza, well, look tame.
Tibetan revolutionaries are now seeking to make one last stand in the weeks leading up to the 103rd Olympiad, which Beijing hopes will mark its emergence as a world power. The leaders behind the movement are Tibetan monks, reflecting a seeming resurgence of Buddhist assertiveness after Buddhist-monk-led protests in Myanmar.
(All that needs to happen next is monk self-immolations in the streets, and this will look much like the 1960s with burning Buddhists in Asia and books on counterinsurgency.)
Tenzin Gyatso, the Dalai Lama, is now 73 years old. Last year he received the Congressional Gold Medal--he is also a recipient of honorary Canadian citizenship and the Nobel Peace Prize (Kip thought these were the same thing). There are few moments left for the Dalai Lama to convert external moral support into actual political and resource support. The Dalai Lama has limited the demands of the movement over the years, willing to accept simply his return to Tibet and the protection of Tibetan culture, Buddhism, and autonomy while acknowledging Chinese sovereignty over the country.
With the Olympics putting China center stage, the Dalai Lama and his Tibetan supporters seek to keep the pot stirred just enough to embarrass China, to have people threaten or introduce significant possibilities of boycotts of the Olympics, and to make the possibility of acquiescence to Tibetan demands more palatable to the Chinese government. It is a very wise use of intensive media coverage of China with the upcoming Olympics.
Widespread protests have erupted through much of the Chinese province of Tibet and areas that were once part of Tibet but are now subsumed into other Chinese provinces. The Chinese government has responded by a major military crackdown and by trying to entirely cut off the province from Western media. Chinese media has highlighted violent aspects of the protests in order to garner more support within China for a crackdown on Tibetan demonstrators. Tenzin Gyatso has now called for an international investigation of "cultural genocide" in Tibet.
The troops and the monks are now in the streets. We will have to see how strong the desire for liberty is in the hearts of the average Tibetan. I give them pretty good chances of making an ongoing impact if they can keep the pressure up through the Olympics rather than pull the Burma fizzle.
Update: Charlie, here. See also, "The Restless Children of the Dalai Lama," for a discussion of inter-generational differences amongst Tibetan exiles. What role might these Tibetan Tigers have played in the current uprising?
Update II: What's next, free love?
Tibetan exiles here said they had also received news of at least two Buddhist monks who set themselves on fire as an act of protest; that claim could not be independently confirmed.
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8 comments:
Tibet--An excellent object lesson on what pacifism will get you.
Not one American will buy one less trinket from Walmart over this, never mind any concrete measures. We don't have the people, will or money to do so, and why risk anything over Tibet anyway? Because certain emotional people get weepy around the Dalai Lama, are you serious?
elf, for what it's worth, I recommend an exploration of strategic nonviolence, highly different than pacifism. I throw out Ackerman and Duval's a Force More Powerful as a place to start as well as many of Gandhi's work which says that he would choose violence over inaction. Nonviolence has its place in war of the people.
On another level, China may well be on the verge of a revolution that will catch virtually the entire world by surprise. Tienanmen (sp) Square was merely the first act - a "Boston Massacre" if you will, of a much larger story. The Chinese leaders sent the students to be "re-educated in rural areas and factories, my suspicion is they actually became viral vectors carrying the notion of freedom into every nook and cranny of the ChiCom countryside. Add an ossified politburo and smothering bureaucracy to the mix and the "emerging superpower" may prove to have a foundation in quicksand.
The one linking factor in all revolutionary movements in the last century has been an emerging middle-class that feels it is being denied access to economic and political power. There is a tipping point where the existing power structure in trying to keep these new elites down, will seal its own fate. One can argue that even al Qaeda is an Arab variation on this - think about it.
Guess what Chinese demographic trends are going on even as we speak?
Like the fall of the Soviet Union, the idea of a civil war in a country with ICBMs and tactical nukes scares the hell out of me.
- One Man Gang
Kip-pacifism vs. Strategic non-violence...
I think that either approach would only work on people of conscience, or squeamish in other words. The Chinese are not. The Nazi's or Soviets would have mailed George Washington Martha's wedding ring.
With the digit in it. He would have quit.
Kip..we bore arms for a reason. Ugly but true.
And I wasn't calling anyone a pacifist, except the Dalai Lama. These people will cease to exist, along with their religion and cause.
One Man Gang,
You are overly optimistic. Right now, the Chinese Gov't's bargain w/ the people is, We give you economic progress, and You shut your mouth on all things political.
As long as the economic growth continues, Chinese gov't will keep going.
On the grass roots level, the Party is responsive ENOUGH to the concerns of the people. When they stop responding to corruption scandals, et al, is when the revolution will come.
It's not "freedom", but economics and corruption that will break the communist party.
Jimmy: On the contrary, I'm not optimistic at all. Right now, the only things floating our economic boat are retail operations dependent on easy access to cheap consumer goods from China. Take that away and things get real grim over here real fast.
When I start to think of a bunch of ChiCom apparatchiks trying desperately to hold onto their power and their heads, (Kim Jong-il, call your office) with the keys to a nuclear stockpile, my "trouble nerve" about shakes itself loose from its moorings.
I'm saying that the "deal" you describe, like all such social compacts that don't address both sides of the coin, will fail and I fear sooner rather than later.
If the last thousand years of European history teach us anything, it is that economic and political freedom for an emerging middle class are the two sides of that coin.
One Man Gang
One Man Gang,
Sorry I did not address your main point on your first comment, which is regarding the viral agents.
It is not happening. The communists have had 80 years of practice in censoring its dissidents, and all of those "re-educated" ex-students did not have a chance to spread "democracy".
Right now, there is no "new elite". The party cadre has insinuated itself into the economic growth using their connections and people skills honed over a lifetime of politicking. The party has 4 main constituents: military, business, gov't bureaucrats, and the communist true believers. The true believers are dying off every day, w/ no one in the pipeline to replace them.
What unites the party is nationalism, and bureaucratic inertia.
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