The Future of Populist Politics
Colorado College's 125th Anniversary Symposium
Cultures in the 21st Century: Conflicts and Convergences
Delivered at Colorado College on February 6, 1999 at 12:00 PM
in a discussion forum with the same title.
by
Robert Kaplan
Its a great honor to be here and especially to listen to some of the
seminars. The one this morning with Ken Minogue and Dani Rodrik was truly brilliant, and I
hope I can live up to that.
If I was talking to you one hundred years ago in this place, and I was on
the speaking circuit, I would be like most public speakers of the time in the late 1890s,
very optimistic about the future of democracy, politics, the world. And that is because
three words were not in general usage at the time. In fact, I dont think these three
words existed in any dictionary at the time. They are totalitarianism, fascism, and
inflation. In other words, we may not even have names yet for the evils and the troubles
that may confront us in the twenty-first century. And these three words basically came
about because of the way populist politics chain-reacted with the industrial revolution to
create the real cataclysms of the twentieth century.
Therefore, I think that the real question we all have to ask ourselves is,
because, in the twentieth century, democratization throughout Europe and the culmination
of the industrial revolution led indirectly to Nazism and to Fascism, how does
democratization throughout the world now chain-react with the post-industrial revolution?
What kind of new disease variance will that lead to? What kind of troubles will that lead
to, what kind of opportunities? Because I am very worried about the future of populist
politics, I dont think democracy is necessarily good. I repeat that I dont
think democracy is necessarily good. I think democracy, like technology, is value neutral.
It all depends on the circumstances in which it is applied. It is a magnifier of both good
and evil. Hitler and Mussolini both came to power in democratic circumstances.
Im going to divide this up into two parts. Im going to talk a
bit about democracy, a bit about technology and put them together and give you a bunch of
case studies around the world.
Its my experience as a foreign correspondent that democracy works
best when it is instituted last as the capstone after a whole bunch of other social and
economic developments. When there are already institutions manned by literate bureaucrats;
when there are already borders that are more or less agreed upon; when there is more or
less agreement about the big issues [such as] which ethnic group, if any, controls what
territory; when there is already a middle class that pays its taxes. Then, when democracy
is instituted, as in Taiwan, Chile, and other places, it has really deep meaning and leads
to a betterment of society. Unfortunately, throughout the world now, elections are being
held under Wiemar conditionsin places where you have inflation rates, unemployment
rates, weak institutional situations that are worse than in Germany in the 1920s, Italy in
the 1920s, Germany in the 1930s. So we have to think, what is this going to lead to, what
kind of problems?
Some examples. The wars of the Yugoslav succession
are basically
about an authoritarian system collapsing and people getting democratic rights in the
various republics. A number of the war criminals came to power through democratic
circumstances, and a number of others have been legitimized in power through free and fair
elections. Rwanda, 1992, occurred partly as a result of a democratization process whereby
political parties were formed, and, because there was no class system because there was no
economy, people could only divide up according to ethnic and regional groups. Political
parties thus institutionalized already existing ethnic divisions and made those divisions
even more lethal than they were. Algeria held an election in 1992, and that chain-reacted
with a bunch of other circumstances that led to the ongoing civil war and anarchy there
now. Tunisia, on the other hand next door, has decided to hold only fixed elections where
the leader makes sure he gets ninety-nine percent of the votesand Tunisia is an
emerging middle class society at peace.
Again, with all these examples, Im not trying to disparage democracy
so much as Im trying to show that the world is a much more complicated place than
people think. We have to look at each place on its own, and not every place is going to be
better served by pushing elections on it overnight. As a journalist, I covered the first
free and fair elections in Sudans post-colonial history in 1985. The foreign
communities, all the international experts cheered on free and fair elections, and
everything was monitored. Within a year, the system collapsed into the most brutal
military tyranny in Sudans post-colonial history. Why? Eleven percent of Sudanese
women could read; the literacy rate over the whole country was twenty-two percent; no
institutions whatsoever; [the] ethnic and religious divide between north and south; and on
and on it goes. Venezuela, [with] forty years of democracy, [has] very little to show for
itthe elite has most of its money in Miami bank accounts. Azerbaijan. Theres a
cliché that democracies dont go to war. Democracies that are middle class and have
strong institutions dont go to war. Armenia and Azerbaijan democratized in the early
1990s, and that led to a war in which 20,000 people were killed and 250,000 people were
made refugees.
The most troubling examples are China and Russia. Chinese autocracy has
led to more personal freedoms and a more dramatic rise in material conditions in the last
fifteen years for more people, more dramatically, in a quicker time span than any time in
recorded economic history, I believe. Russian democracy has led to the collapse of the
country. Russias inflation rates throughout the 1980s were very, very high;
Chinas were very, very low. On and on it goes in terms of what the average Chinese
has compared to fifteen years ago, compared to what the average Russian has compared to
fifteen years ago. Homosexuals in China can live together; people can buy videos, open
bank accounts, travel across the country without internal travel permits; unmarried
couples can live togetherthese are personal freedoms, not political freedoms.
Economic growth delivers personal freedoms; democracy only delivers political freedoms,
often.
In fact, the real issue about civil society in the 21st century is the
middle class. Places that have large and competent middle classes are nice or decent
places to live. In places that dont have middle classes, even if theyve had
five elections, tomorrow is unpredictable. So the real question is, how do you enlarge the
middle class? Well, most often in history, Id be willing to argue, middle classes
are created by authoritarian regimes. And once those middle classes are enlarged enough so
that they have self-confidenceand are [powerful] enoughthey throw out the very
authoritarians who created them. And thats how you get real, meaningful democracy.
Authoritarianism creates middle classes, and the middle classes throw out the
authoritarians. The problem, though, in our world, is that ninety to ninety-five percent
of all human births are occurring among the poorest sectors of society or in the poorest
countries. So increasing the middle class, in relative terms, is very problematic. India
is not an exception to this. India may have 80, 120, 200 million members of the middle
class, depending upon how you may want to define middle class, but there are nine hundred
million Indians or so. India is not a middle class country.
So, what is the future? I dont see military regimes succeeding. I
think they have been discredited. What I see coming about are hybrid regimes, what
Thucydides and Polybius wrote about and what classical and modern philosophers often
considered under different words: mixed regimes that combine various elements of democracy
and authoritarianism in a sort of social compromise.
Let me give you a few examples. I go to Turkey about once, twice a year.
Turkey is a fascinating example of an official democracy but an unofficially mixed regime,
whereby the really important governing unit is the National Security Council. Turkish
friends of mine say, "The generals come with thick dossiers with which to lecture,
and the politicians or parliamentarians come as tourists in order to listen." Turkey
has had a succession of weak, minority, parliamentary governments, which has necessitated
the military to move into the vacuum. I am very troubled and worried about the increasing
militarization of Turkish politics. I like the balance the way it isor the way it
was a few years ago. If the military gets a bit too much more power than it has now,
Ill be very worried. And if the next election produces another weak, minority
government, there could even be another coup in Turkey. But at present, the Turkish hybrid
regime, where the parliament circles the military and the military circles the parliament,
will probably be more long lasting than the suffocating dictatorships in the Arab world
next door or what I call the "paper democracies" in Russia and much of the
developing world.
Peru is another mixed regime. Fujimori was elected twice democratically
but basically runs the country through the security services. Jordan, in the news now
tragically, has been a very well functioning mixed regime with a very feisty, active
parliament where the King moves in every once in a while on a major issue and totally
abrogates what the parliament has done. The Jordanian parliament wanted to overturn the
Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty, to abrogate it totallythe King did not allow it.
Thats the positive benefit of a mixed regime. Bulgaria is a bad kind of mixed
regime. Its officially a democracy, holds elections, and the IMF loves it a lot, but
half the power is really in the hands of a few criminal groupings that have links to
Russian mafias. In terms of what actually goes on in the daily lives of Bulgarians, these
criminal groupings have as much power as the parliament. So there is kind of a standoff
between the official, democratically elected government and the unofficial, criminal
government, and they each circle each other. Its unclear which is going to win.
Pakistan is officially a democracy, but order is really kept by the Inter-services
Intelligence Agency, which is like the CIA with five divisions behind it.
What Im saying is, dont go by the label, because every place
will call itself a democracy. Go by how the system actually works behind the scenes. How
do power relationships really work in various countries?
I guess the most troubling prospect is the Middle East. Because the Middle
East is economically stagnant, in most countries half the population is fourteen years old
or younger. I think the future Middle East is going to see a lot of messy, Mexico-style
scenarios that will be much worse than Mexico because you have a bunch of
leadersold, one man rulers; "thugocracies," I call them. And thats
going to change. We like to think that a lot has happened in the Middle East in the last
forty years because we happened to have been alive during that period. But, in fact, very
little has happened in the Middle East. Although youve had enormous cultural and
economic change, youve had tremendous movement from countryside to cities. Countries
like Iran, Algeria, and Egypt are all now big, urbanized societies, and the political
systems in most countries are totally unchanged compared to the 1950s. Egypt is still run
under the same military emergency laws as 1952. And history shows that, when you have
tremendous cultural and economic change, political change often catches up, and it catches
up very rudely. Right now were in a very nice situationwe promulgate
democracy, but we rely on autocrats in order to keep stability and order in civil society.
[If] we have a problem with Egypt, we deal with one man, Hosni Mubarakthe same with
other countries. But, in the future, because you cant hold back social and economic
change, there will be democratization, and we may have forty or fifty corrupt generals and
politicians with which to deal in each of these countries. The simple bipolar Arab-Israeli
era may actually look like a romantic, sepia-tone period compared to the real complexities
of a Middle East where youre going to have many places in which the populations are
far, far too sophisticated for one-man, centralized control but are still not developed to
the point where the institutions are there for stable democracies. So you are going to
have many, messy, in-between, hybrid scenarios where it is going to be very hard to affect
real dialogue and change.
Now, on the issue of technology, this is important for populist politics
because the industrial revolution is not like the post-industrial revolution.
Hitlers death camps and Stalins terror famine could not have occurred except
against the backdrop of the industrial revolution. They required telegraphy, railway
lines, big armies, things like that. In other words, the industrial revolution was about
bignessand it brought big evilsbut the post-industrial revolution is about
smallness, miniaturization, the defeat of geographyand I think its going to
lead to a lot more subtle evils. We like to think that the computer is helping populist
politics by letting people communicate with each other. If I gave all of you a microphone
and said, "Speak at the same time," would we be communicating better?
Thats what the Internet is like in many ways. People had the same optimistic
assumptions after the Gutenberg Bible, and that led to the religious wars a hundred years
later. The reason is because, when knowledge becomes easier and cheaper to spread out, to
divulge, knowledge becomes vulgarized. [That is not] because it comes into the hands of
uneducated people who are not dangerous or well-educated people who are not dangerous but
[because it comes] to badly educated people who are always dangerous. If you look at the
worst tyrants of history, theyve always been badly or half-educated
peopleHitler, Stalin, etc.
So, lets put all this together as I sum up. Youve got
knowledge spreading everywhere, youve got countries where half the population is
under fourteen, you have increasing water shortages and environmental shortages in many
place, but yet democratization is unstoppable because of social and economic change.
Groups want to be empowered; they wont put up with these one-man, 1950s-style
military regimes anymore. So a lot of these places, the Chinese regime for example, are
sitting on top of a volcano, and Im not sure that this volcano is going to spew out
good things.
Everyone talks about the twenty-first century being a century of human
rights, personal freedoms. I think the real preeminent philosopher of the twenty-first
century is going to be Thomas Hobbes. In Chapter 15 of Leviathan, he made a very
stirring statement when he said, "Before just and unjust can have their place, there
must be some coercive power." What he addressed was the whole struggle for order. As
Ken Minogue said this morning, "As more and more people become free, become
empowered, their interests conflict with each other." Were going to see more
and more conflict because more and more people are going to have the means to express
themselves politically, and systems will break down. Therefore, I think the first part of
the next century will be about how to arrange new systems of order because, if there is no
order, then there is no justice for anyone.
Thank you very much.
© 1999 by Robert Kaplan |