In the interests of freedom
Niall Ferguson American colossus Saturday June 5, Channel
4
I can only hope that not too many people wasted a whole two hours
watching this programme: its political statement was based on that
worst of all ‘controversial’ viewpoints - an attack on the US government
from the right.
This was, of course, not any kind of anti-Americanism,
but instead an attempt to justify the idea that the various administrations
of the last century had failed to perform their supposed duty to
follow in the footsteps of the British empire, which is so strongly
promoted in a rather pathetic book (titled simply Colossus),
written by ‘historian’ Niall Ferguson, the programme’s presenter.
And no, he is not concerned with the vicious brutality of British
colonialism - he informs us how much better Africans feel now that
they can speak English.
However, he takes this ‘theory’ to bizarre conclusions
- we are told that it would have been worthwhile to launch nuclear
strikes on the Chinese in 1953 so that they could enjoy the fruits
of liberal democracy.
For someone who has apparently made a career out of
lecturing on current affairs, Ferguson is remarkably naive. For
this programme was unadulterated nationalism with an absurd unwillingness
to stare facts in the face: his theory on the US collapsing in 10
years under the strain of its ageing population was tin-pot economics,
since he seemingly had no idea that this result of the ‘baby boom’
will affect the EU much more seriously. Of course, the suggestion
that the US does not generate enough wealth to care for its elderly
citizens is another absurdity - whether it is willing to do so is
a different question.
The notion that imperialism is anything other than
“a force for good” just did not feature in Ferguson’s remit. He
was remarkably unaware of imperialism’s raison d’ętre; while
he obviously thinks himself incredibly brave to refer to the US
as an empire, the idea that the purpose of such an empire is to
spread democracy around the world is rather lacking for a ‘historian’.
After all, given that the countries the US has bombed since World
War II have not tended to become democracies afterwards, he could
only offer Japan and Germany as examples of where the Americans
had made a difference in this regard - Ferguson went on to blame
the US for following these examples in too few cases.
However, the learned professor did have an alternative
reason why countries such as Vietnam, Libya, Iraq and North Korea
have not become democracies, which was that too little force had
been employed to impose it. Adopting very much the approach of army
generals who use phrases such as ‘We had to destroy the village
in order to save it’ and ‘Better dead than unfree’, he clearly felt
that gung-ho nuclear attacks on cities were the way to go as regards
liberation.
However, rather like British troops shooting down spear-wielding
indigenous warriors with repeater rifles (also not the focus of
his book), I do not exactly think that this would have been too
effective in achieving liberation, except perhaps in ‘saving people
from the Cultural Revolution’ - by killing them off before it started.
However, perhaps the most laughable aspect of this
fundamentally flawed programme was the fact that he had such a perverse
view on what his profession actually stands for. While he contrasted
the myths of US history with the reality, he clearly does not feel
that the same exercise is appropriate when it comes to the British
empire, since it passed his test of introducing civilisation to
barbaric foreigners.
The programme’s central agenda was such an inane affirmation
of the chauvinist idea that certain nations have a manifest destiny
to bring order to the rest of the world, that it refused to see
that freedom is actually possible where US power does not rule the
roost. Indeed, it is impossible for freedom to exist in any genuine
sense under either colonial or neo-colonial rule.
Nevertheless, one of the most interesting parts of
the programme was when Ferguson vented his criticism of anti-Vietnam
war sentiment across the world. I thought how lucky I was to have
such a man explain that my view of the conflict had been shaped
by what was an example of “the winners writing history”: I had never
realised before that the Vietnamese government was beaming propaganda
into my television set.
Thank god that the likes of Niall Ferguson are able
to offer us such an objective account of how the brave US and UK
patriots have fought to suppress national self-determination everywhere
in the interests of freedom l
John Davidson
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