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THE ABDUCTION OF MODERNITY
By
Henry C K Liu
Part I: The race toward barbarism
Part II: That old time religion
Part III: Rule of law vs Confucianism
Part IV: Taoism and modernity
Part V: The Enlightenment and modernity
Part VI-a: Imperialism as modernity
Part VI-b: Imperialism and fragmentation
Part VI-c:
Imperialism resisted
This article appeared in AToL
on October 15, 2003
Between the epochal Treaty of Berlin and World War I, the Ottoman state
enjoyed a minor victory against the Greeks in a short 1897-98 war but
suffered additional losses in the 1911-12 Tripolitanian war with Italy
and, more seriously, in the Balkan wars of 1912-13. In these latter
conflicts, the Ottoman successor states of Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia
at first fought against the Ottomans and then among themselves. In the
end, the Ottomans lost the last of their European possessions except
for the coastal plain between Edirne and the capital city, Istanbul.
In 1879, Otto von Bismarck formed a military alliance with
Austria-Hungary, to which Italy was added in 1882, giving it the name
Triple Alliance. He also finessed a concurrent alliance with Russia,
the enemy of Austria-Hungary over the Balkans. Britain then found
itself holding the balance in the global game of balance of power.
After Bismarck's retirement and the lapse of the German-Russian
alliance, France answered with a Dual Alliance with Russia in 1894.
Britain had formed an alliance with Japan in 1902 against their common
enemy, Russia. A naval race between Britain and Germany after 1889 woke
Britain up from its historical preoccupation with French threats and
pushed Britain into the fold of the Dual Alliance in the form of an
Entente Cordiale in 1904, in which Britain recognized French
penetration into Morocco in exchange for French recognition of British
occupation of Egypt.
Having been defeated by Japan in 1904, Russia settled its differences
with Britain with a view to preserve Russian interests in the Far East,
and the Triple Entente was formed with France, Russia and Britain. In
March 1905, Kaiser William II disembarked from a German warship in
Tangier, where he made a startling speech in support of Morocco's
independence from France, aiming to split France and Britain. Germany
demanded and managed an international conference on Morocco in 1906 but
failed to dislodge international support for French claim on Morocco.
The second Morocco Crisis of 1911 arose out of the dispatch of the
German gunboat Panther to Agadir on July 1. The ostentatious pretext
for this gunboat diplomacy was the request of German firms in Agadir
for protection in the disorderly state of the country. But inasmuch as
there were no German subjects at Agadir and the port was not open to
Europeans, it was clear that the real motive was a desire to reopen the
whole question to prevent a further French penetration unless France
would negotiate for a final settlement of the problem.
On October 4, a convention gave France a de facto protectorate in
Morocco; in return, France pledged itself most explicitly to observe
the principle of open door. On November 2, it was agreed that the
German Empire should receive two prongs of French territory, which
would bring the Cameroons in touch with the Congo and Ubangi Rivers at
Bonga and Mongumba, respectively, while Germany surrendered the Duck's
Beak in the Lake Chad region. The only difficulty arose over the German
demand that France transfer to the German Empire its right of
preemption to the Belgian Congo, but with the assistance of Russia, a
formula was found by which any change in the status of the Congo was
reserved to the decision of the powers signatory of the Berlin African
act of 1885. On November 4, 1911, the Morocco and Congo conventions
were signed in Berlin, a letter from the German foreign secretary to
the French ambassador being annexed in which Germany recognized a
French protectorate in Morocco.
The settlement was a great triumph for France, secured by the
manifestations of national solidarity at home and the diplomatic
assistance of Great Britain. Many Frenchmen regretted the cession of
French territory, but Morocco was certainly far more valuable than the
Congo, and above all the Republic had scored a distinct victory over
the mighty German Empire, which had defeated it in 1870-71. In Germany
there was a corresponding discontent, which manifested itself in bitter
criticisms of the imperial government's diplomacy and in violent
outbursts of hatred for Great Britain, whose intervention spoiled the
German game.
The land Germany received was valuable chiefly as the entering wedge
for further penetration of the Belgian Congo. Such designs were
substantiated by a conversation between the French ambassador in Berlin
and the German foreign minister in the spring of 1914, in which the
latter declared that Belgium was not in a position to develop the Congo
adequately and ought "to give it up". The reverses sustained in this
diplomatic bout with France and Great Britain were a decisive factor in
German consideration of a world war, for it had been brought home to
Berlin that diplomatically the Triple Entente of France, Russia and
Britain was stronger than the Triple Alliance of Prussia,
Austria-Hungary and Italy, a condition that only war could correct.
The German Drang nach Osten (drive to the east) policy spurred
the Austrian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908. The
assassination of the grand duke of Austria, the heir to the Hapsburgs,
in Sarajevo, the capital of Austrian Bosnia, precipitated World War I.
The balance-of-power doctrine, maintained through alliances, that had
stabilized Europe through imperialistic conquests outside of Europe had
led to a power vacuum from the collapse of the Ottoman Dominion that
threw European powers into a global conflict in trying to fill it. The
pressure from Russia and Britain and France limited the Ottoman option
and caused it to join the Central Powers in World War I.
The Drang nach Osten policy also manifested itself in the
financing of the Baghdad Railroad. One of the most important strategic
resources fought over in the Great War was the Near Eastern Railroad.
Under the German-Turkish alliance, it was called the Berlin-Baghdad
Railroad. Later, when the railroad came under French control, the
slogans were "Bordeaux to Baghdad" and "Calais to Cairo". Great Britain
favored "London to Baghdad".
The route followed by the Near Eastern Railroad had been of great
strategic importance for centuries, in part because it allowed access
to the raw-material resources of the region. The Near Eastern Railroad,
along with the Trans-Siberian Railway and the Suez Canal, were intended
as modern versions of the great trade routes of the Middle Ages. The
old caravan routes that had linked East and Near East were now extended
directly into Western Europe by rail and to the Mediterranean Sea by
canal. Westerners took great advantages of their new access to the Near
East via the railroad during and after World War I. Allied troops were
sent into the region in great numbers. Missionaries expanded their
numbers and their projects. Americans in particular were able to
exploit this new opportunity because their country had not suffered the
devastations of the Great War and their wealth had increased greatly
because of it.
The outbreak of war in 1914 between two grand coalitions - Britain,
France and Russia against Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy - doomed
the Ottoman Dominion. Majority sentiment among the Ottoman elite
probably favored a British alliance, but that was not an available
option. Britain already had gained Cyprus and Egypt; thus the road to
India was well guarded. In any event, Britain and France were not able
to reconcile a potential Ottoman ally's claims for territorial
integrity with their Russian ally's demands for Ottoman lands,
especially the waterways connecting the Black and Aegean seas. Ottoman
statesmen well understood that neutrality was not a possibility since
it would have made partition by the winning coalition inevitable. And
so, yielding to the historical anti-British, anti-French and
anti-Russian sentiments among the Young Turk elites who had seized
power during the Balkan wars crisis, the Ottomans entered the war on
what turned out to be the losing side.
During the multi-front, four-year war, the Ottoman world endured truly
horrendous casualties through battles and disease, and the massacre of
its population by the enemy military. As the war ended, British and
French troops were in victorious occupation of Anatolian and Arab
provinces, as well as the capital city itself. During the war, the two
European powers had prepared the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 to
partition the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Dominion between them. The
Sykes-Picot agreement was a secret understanding concluded in May 1916,
during World War I, between Great Britain and France, with the assent
of Russia, for the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire.
The agreement, taking its name from its negotiators, Sir Mark Sykes of
Britain and Georges Picot of France, spelled out the division of
Ottoman Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine into various French and
British-administered areas. The agreement conflicted with pledges
already given by the British to the Hashemite leader Hussein ibn Ali,
Sharif of Mecca, who was persuaded to lead an Arab revolt in the Hejaz
against the Ottoman rulers on the understanding that the Arabs would
eventually receive much of the territory won. The Sykes-Picot
Agreement, the Paris Peace Conference and the Cairo Conference were
genres of political dominance of the European imperialist powers, which
shifted borders and annexed territories, inventing dependency through
mandates and protectorates. The British had persuaded the Arabs to rise
up against the Ottoman rulers. The British high commissioner in Egypt,
Sir Henry McMahon, corresponded with the Sharif of Mecca, promising an
independent Arab state in return for fighting the Ottomans. Unaware of
the secret Sykes-Picot agreement, the Sharif of Mecca initiated a
revolt against Ottoman rule in 1916 with the help of the British.
This secret agreement was proof of British duplicity. The Arabs learned
about the agreement only in 1917, when the new Soviet Union published
it. The agreement deprived the Arabs of the right to rule their
newly-won territories. Most of the Middle East came under British and
French control. The vision of a free and united Arab realm had been an
illusion perpetrated by Western imperialism. The Sykes-Picot Agreement
set scenes for a century of border conflicts that continue today. The
Paris Peace Conference in 1919 legitimized imperialist partitions.
Britain was entrusted with mandatory powers for Iraq and Palestine,
while Syria and Lebanon came under the French mandate. Under Article
22, the League of Nations stated: "Territories inhabited by peoples
unable to stand themselves would be entrusted to advanced nations until
such time as the local population can handle matters."
As the war ended, Britain and France both sent troops to enforce their
claims and peace conferences subsequently confirmed this wartime
division. Palestine was the exception, becoming part of the British
zone and not, as was originally planned, an international zone. Britain
thus obtained much of present-day Iraq, Israel, Palestine and Jordan,
while France took the Syrian and Lebanese lands - both remaining in
control until after World War II.
Britain merged the Ottoman provinces Baghdad, Basra and Mosul into a
new state of Iraq, inhabited by three different groups of people:
Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds. Under British rule, the new Iraqis were
subjected to more taxes than under Ottoman rule. Nationalist revolt
rose against the new British rulers in 1920.
To crush the Iraqi national-liberation movement, Winston Churchill, as
secretary of state for war, introduced new military tactics with
massive bombing of villages as the original "shock and awe" doctrine,
revived eight decades later by the US military. Churchill ordered the
use of mustard gas, stating: "I do not understand the squeamishness
about the use of gas. I am strongly in favor of using poison gas
against uncivilized tribes." Churchill argued that the usage of gas was
a "scientific expedient" and it "should not be prevented by the
prejudices of those who do not think clearly". Whole villages were
bombed and gassed. There was wholesale slaughter of civilians. Men,
women and children fleeing from villages were machine-gunned by
low-flying planes. The Royal Air Force routinely bombed and used poison
gas against the Kurd, Sunni and Shi'ite tribes without discrimination.
In 1911, Italy and France were in competition over Libya. Fearful that
France might attack the Ottoman Empire and seize Libya, the Italians
attacked first. They defeated the Ottomans and, through a peace treaty,
obtained the Dodacanese Islands and Libya from the Ottomans. Encouraged
by this development, the new states of Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria and
Montenegro attacked the Ottomans, hoping to gain all of the Ottoman
provinces in the north of Greece, Thrace, and the southern European
coast of the Black Sea. They easily defeated the Ottomans and drove
them back, almost to the very edge of Europe.
The Second Balkan War erupted just two years later (1913) when Greece,
Serbia and Montenegro disapproved of the amount of territory that
Bulgaria had annexed. Joined by the Ottomans, these three powers
managed to roll back Bulgarian territorial gains. This was the last
military victory in Ottoman history. It is a strange note in history
that this last defeat and triumph for the Ottomans would precipitate a
situation that would snowball into World War I. The Ottoman territories
that fell into European hands precipitated a crisis among European
powers that would eventually lead directly to that great conflict.
As a result of World War I and the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, the
Ottomans lost all their territory in Syria, Palestine, Arabia and
Mesopotamia. The European powers fought one another in Africa and the
Middle East by encouraging revolution among the peoples there. The
victorious Allied Powers - the United States, France and Britain -
parceled out parts of the once-vast Ottoman Empire and its resources
among themselves according to various treaties. The US received the
governorship of the capital city Istanbul (Constantinople), France
received Syria, and Great Britain got much of Anatolia, ie the
newly-established Republic of Turkey. Correspondingly, Turkey and its
ally during World War I, Germany, suffered territorial and strategic
losses.
In 1922, Ottoman rule officially came to an end when Turkey was
declared a republic. While the Ottomans were suffering from defeats in
Europe, internally they were faced with revolution by liberal
nationalists who wished to adopt a Western style of government. These
nationalists called themselves the "Young Turks", and in the early
1920s they began an open revolt against the Ottoman government. The
goal of the revolution was to modernize and Westernize Turkey, and the
primary theoretician of that change was Mustafa Kemal, who is known in
Turkish history as Ataturk ("Father of the Turks").
As president of Turkey from 1922-28, Ataturk introduced a series of
legislative reforms that adopted European legal systems and civil codes
and thus overthrew both the Shariah and the kanun. He
legislated against Arabic script and converted Turkish writing to the
European Roman script. He legislated against the Arabic call to prayer
and eliminated the caliphate and all the mystical Sufi orders of Islam.
Ataturk was the first to theorize and put into practice the
secularization of the Islamic state and society. Nothing like it had
ever happened in the whole of Islamic history. Efforts to emulate this
secularization, however, have by and large been unsuccessful in other
Islamic states.
In Arabia and Anatolia, new states under European protection emerged
from the Ottoman wreckage. After a prolonged struggle, the Saudi state
defeated its many rivals in the Arabian Peninsula, including the
Hashemites of Mecca, finally forming the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in
1932. As World War I approached its end, Ottoman resistance forces had
formed in various areas, concentrating in the Anatolian provinces that
had provided the bulk of Ottoman troops. In the ensuing months and
years, as Great Power claims to the Arab provinces of the empire were
implemented, general strategies of Ottoman resistance against foreign
occupation transmuted into ones for the liberation of Anatolia only.
Fighting and defeating the invading Greek forces that claimed western
and northern Anatolia for Greece, the resistance leaders gradually
redefined their struggle as a Turkish one, for the liberation of a
Turkish homeland in Anatolia.
The concentration of significant Ottoman-cum-Turkish forces in Anatolia
meant that any British and French occupation would be very costly. The
emerging Turkish leadership, in recognition of pragmatic reality for
its part, was willing to negotiate on certain issues vital to Great
Power interests, such as repayment of outstanding Ottoman debts, the
question of the waterways connecting the Black and Aegean seas, and
renunciation of claims to the former Arab provinces. In the end, the
Great Powers and the Turkish nationalists agreed to terminate the
Ottoman Empire. The sultanate ceased to exist in 1922, and the Ottoman
caliphate ended in 1923.
The end of Ottomanism left the former Ottoman territories with a
century of endless war and widespread poverty even with the discovery
in the region of the richest resource of the modern era - oil. The
carnage continues today.
The New Imperialism
The Victorian Era marks the maturing of Western modernity, considered
the height of the industrial revolution in Britain and the apex of the
British Empire, defined as the years from 1837 to 1901. The Victorian
period was personified by Her Majesty Queen Victoria's rule in this
period. She abhorred all modern devices, including the telephone, which
was invented by Alexander Bell in 1876, the year she became Empress of
India. The age was a clash between the widespread cultivation of an
outward appearance of dignity and restraint and the widespread presence
of deplorable social phenomena, including prostitution, child labor,
and having an economy based to a large extent on the exploitation of
the working classes at home and the "inferior peoples" of the colonies.
Charles Dickens' modernity contrasted sharply with Rudyard Kipling's
modernity.
The term "New Imperialism" refers to an era of colonial expansion
spanning the late 19th and early 20th centuries, between the
Franco-Prussian War and World War I (1871-1914). The term "imperialism"
was a new word in the mid-19th century. According to the Oxford
English Dictionary, it was first recorded in 1858 to describe Pax
Britannica. At that time, imperialism was regarded as a new
phenomenon deserving of a new word to describe it. Moreover, according
to the Oxford English Dictionary, in 19th-century England
"imperialism" was generally used only to describe British policies.
However, soon after the invention of the term, "imperialism" was used
retroactively in reference to policies of the Roman Empire to justify
the legitimacy of British hegemony.
In the 20th century, the term has been used to describe the policies of
both the Soviet Union (socialist imperialism) and the US, although
analytically these differed greatly from each other and from
19th-century imperialism. Furthermore, the term has been expanded to
apply, in general, to any historical instance of the aggrandizement of
a greater power at the expense of lesser powers. Consequently,
historians today refer to European imperialism after the
Franco-Prussian War as the "New Imperialism". Of late, the term
"empire" has been revived by some, including self-proclaimed Marxists,
in a positive light as a preferred universal institution to impose
global peace and order.
Between 1871 and 1914, there was a renewed drive for economic and
physical expansion among the world's more powerful nation-states,
including those outside Western Europe, such as Japan and the US.
During this period, Europe added 20 percent of the Earth's land area
(nearly 23 million square kilometers) to its collection of overseas
colonial possessions and almost all of the world's non-white
population. As it had not yet been formally or informally occupied by
the Western powers, Africa became the primary target, although
expansion also took place in other areas, notably the East Asian
seaboard and Southeast Asian islands, where the US and Japan laid claim
to territory. Contemporary English writers variously described the New
Imperialism as "the Era of Empire for Empire's Sake", "the Great
Adventure", and "the Scramble for Africa".
The defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo in 1815 led to a
continental order decidedly favorable to Britain's interests, known as
the Concert of Europe. Austria was a barrier to the expansion of
unified Italian and German nation-states until after the Crimean War,
forcing other potential imperial powers to concentrate on continental
concerns rather than overseas trade. Britain, an island nation with a
longstanding tradition of naval and maritime superiority, however,
could afford the luxury of encouraging commercial ties with overseas
markets.
Between the Congress of Vienna (after the defeat of Napoleon) and the
Franco-Prussian War, Britain reaped the benefits of being the world's
sole industrial nation. If political conditions in a particular
overseas markets were stable enough, Britain could control its market
for industrial goods through free trade alone without having to resort
to formal rule or mercantilism. Britain was even supplying half the
needs in manufactured goods of such nations as Germany, France, Belgium
and the US. In this sense, the movement toward aggressive international
rivalry, the movement toward formal empire and imperialist competition,
had its roots in the breakdown of Pax Britannica.
The decline of Pax Britannica after the Franco-Prussian War was
made possible by changes in the European and world economies and in the
continental balance of power, the breakdown of the Concert of Europe
and the consequent establishment of nation-states in Germany and Italy.
These developments rendered global imperialist competition feasible, in
spite of Britain's centuries of long-established naval and maritime
superiority. As unification of Germany by the Prussian Garrison State
went forward, contending capitalist powers were thus ready to compete
with Britain over stakes in overseas markets. The aggressive chauvinism
of Napoleon III and the relative political stability of France under
the Third Republic also rendered France more capable of challenging
Britain's global preeminence. Germany, Italy and France were simply no
longer as embroiled in European concerns and domestic disputes as they
had been before the Franco-Prussian War. The dispute shifted to the
non-Western world and led to World War I, which gravely wounded the
British and put an end to the Prussian state. World War II was
precipitated by the competition between Japan and the US to fill the
vacuum left by the decline of the British Empire in Asia.
Banks, through the finance of industry, were able to exert a great deal
of control over the British economy, politics and policy. During the
period of unregulated cutthroat competition of the mid-Victorian era,
as nations saw the advantage of expansion, private producers also
became aware of the advantages of consolidation, in the forms of larger
corporations, through mergers and alliances of separate firms, such as
mass production, lobbying power, and efficient union-busting. Size was
recognized as a base for power. To create and operate such industrial
cartels required larger sums than the manufacturer could ordinarily
provide, resulting in a new capitalist stage of development.
Concurrently, the need to break up old superstates to prevent their
revitalization as formidable competitors took on universal recognition.
By the 1870s, London financial houses had achieved an unprecedented
control of industry, contributing to an increasing concerns among elite
policymakers regarding British protection of overseas investments -
particularly those in foreign governments' securities and debt and in
foreign-government-backed development enterprises such as railroads and
strategic canals. The huge expansion of these investments after about
1860 and with the economic and political instability of many areas of
high investment, calls upon the government for protection became
increasingly pronounced. After service sector of the economy (banking,
insurance, rail transportation and shipping) became more prominent at
the expense of manufacturing, the influence of London's financial
interest began rising precipitously. The financial sector had an effect
the decisions taken by Britain's disproportionately aristocratic
bureaucrats and parliamentarians. Late-Victorian politicians, most of
whom were stockholders, "shared a common culture with the financial
class", observed historian Bernard Porter. Colonialism became a
recognized solution to the need to expand markets, increase
opportunities for investors, and ensure the supply of raw material.
Cecil Rhodes, one of the great figures of England's colonization of
Africa, recognized the importance of overseas expansion for maintaining
peace at home.
The Panic of 1873 caused a long depression that did not recover until
1896. It had a number of causes and was itself an important cause of
New Imperialism. A major financial reversal began in Europe from
excessive financing on huge overseas projects that could not generate
profits in time to service the huge debt to provided the high returns
that invested were led to expect.
The crisis reached the US in the autumn of 1873. The signal event was
the failure of Jay Cooke and Co, the country's preeminent investment
banking concern. The firm had handled most of the government's Civil
War bonds at great profit and was the principal backer of the Northern
Pacific Railroad by raising US$100 million from the investing public.
The financing of the fantastic expansion of railroads was analogous to
the excess financing of telecommunication of recent years. The
difference was then the US did not have a central bank to bail out the
failing banks. The Federal Reserve did not come into existence until
1913.
Cooke's fall touched off broad repercussions that engulfed the entire
nation. The New York Stock Exchange closed for 10 days. Credit dried
up, foreclosures skyrocketed, banks failed and factories closed,
costing massive unemployment overnight, without help from any
government safety net. Most of the major railroads failed and
transportation came to a standstill.
The post-Civil War period was one of frenetic, unregulated growth with
the government playing no role in regulating against abuses. More than
any other single event, the extreme overbuilding of the nation's
railroad system laid the groundwork of the Panic and a long depression
that followed. In addition to the ruined fortunes of many Americans,
the Panic of 1873 caused bitter antagonism between workers and the
leaders of finance and industry. This tension would erupt into the
labor unrest and populist protests that marked the following decades.
In Britain, powerful industrial lobbies and government leaders
concluded that profits fell because too many manufactures and too much
capital were chasing too few consumers in the domestic market. Overseas
markets, whether in colonial areas or in nominally sovereign,
pre-industrial states outside Western Europe, a greater profit premium
awaits surplus British capital. These leaders also demanded an end to
free trade and a return to mercantilist-style protectionism. The
combination pointed to the need for empire. The manufacturers and their
bankers were eager for new destinations for exports and pushed the
government to secure captive markets in Africa, the Ottoman Dominion
and Asia.
Among the new conditions, more markedly evident in Britain, the
forerunner of Europe's industrial states, were the long-term effects of
the severe "Long Depression" of 1873-96, which had followed 15 years of
great economic instability. Business after 1873 in practically every
industry suffered from lengthy periods of low and falling profit rates
and price deflation. The continental powers' abandonment of free trade
shrank the European market. Business and government leaders, such as
King Leopold II of Belgium, concluded that protected overseas colonial
markets would solve the problems of overcapacity, low prices and
over-accumulation of surplus capital caused by shrinking continental
markets.
The economy of France was as well devastated during the Long
Depression. In losing the Franco-Prussian War, France had been forced
to pay substantial reparation payments to Prussia. The nation was also
torn by civil struggle between socialists and republicans. The
victorious republicans remained very unstable after taking back Paris
in 1871. The French government ended free trade and began to pursue
colonization as a way to increase its power and aid the French economy.
British imperialism suddenly found itself faced with serious
competition. The Long Depression had bred long-standing fears regarding
economic decline and the emergent strength of trade unionism and
socialism in every European nation and plunged Europe into an era of
aggressive national rivalry. Newly industrializing nation-states such
as Prussia and Austria felt compelled to secure colonies as a matter of
survival. German imperialists argued that Britain's world-power
position gave the British unfair advantages on international markets,
thus limiting Germany's economic growth and threatening its security.
Many European statesmen and industrialists wanted to accelerate the
process of colonialism, securing colonies even before their economies
needed them. Their reasoning was that markets might soon become
glutted, and a nation's economic survival depend on its being able to
offload its surplus products elsewhere. British reactionaries hence
concluded that formal policy for imperialism was necessary for Britain
because of the relative decline of the British share of the world's
export trade and the rise of German, US and French economic
competition. Continental political developments in the late 19th
century also rendered such imperialist competition feasible. Trade,
instead of an exchange of comparative advantage, because a device of
national security. When the current US president, George W Bush,
declared that trade is an issue of national security, he was in essence
harking back to 19th-century imperialism.
Like the other states of continental Europe, Russia was working hard to
industrialize as rapidly as possible. While the Russo-Japanese War of
1905 was a stunning defeat, this embarrassment only cause the Russian
leaders to push harder on their industrialization drive. British
Conservatives in particular feared that Russia would continue to expand
southward into Ottoman territory and acquire a port on the
Mediterranean or even Constantinople, a long-touted goal of Russian
foreign policy and Orthodoxy.
These fears became especially pronounced after the 1869 completion of
the Suez Canal, prompting the official rationale behind Benjamin
Disraeli's purchase of the waterway. The close proximity of the czar's
territorially expanding empire in Central Asia to India also terrified
Lord Curzon, thus triggering the British wars of expansion in
Afghanistan. Cecil Rhodes advocated the prospect of a "Cape to Cairo"
empire, which would link by rail the extrinsically important canal to
the intrinsically mineral-and-diamond-rich south, from a strategic
standpoint. Though hampered by German conquest of Tanganyika until the
end of World War I, Rhodes lobbied on behalf of such a sprawling East
African empire. Until the Entente Cordiale, the British leadership was
long very concerned that Britain was extremely vulnerable to a land
attack on her colonies combined with a naval assault by Russia's ally
France.
Observing the rise of trade unionism, socialism, and other protest
movements during an era of mass society in both Europe and later North
America, the elite in particular was able to use imperial jingoism to
coopt the support of the impoverished industrial working class. Riding
the sentiments of the late-19th-century Romantic Age, imperialism
either inculcated the masses with, or realized their own tendencies
toward, "glorious" neo-aristocratic virtues and helped instill broad
nationalist sentiments. In an age of mass media, every citizen became
deeply patriotic during even minor wars. A good example of this was the
Spanish-American War of 1898 fought for control of Cuba and the
Philippines as enterprises of "manifest destiny".
Europe's elites also found advantage in formalizing overseas expansion:
mammoth monopolies wanted imperial protection of overseas investments
against competition and political unrest, bureaucrats wanted more
posts, military officers desired the easy glory of colonial wars, and
the waning landed gentry wanted formal titles for their untitled
siblings. Many of the common people also clamored for colonies. This
was especially true in Germany, where the leader, Otto von Bismarck,
firmly disliked colonies and saw them as burdensome and useless. The
people of Germany thought differently and demanded colonial expansion
to match that of the other European states. By the end of Bismarck's
time in office he was forced to concede to the people and annexed some
small islands in the South Pacific. He was dismissed by the new Kaiser
Wilhelm II, who responded to the people's demands by risking German
security in attempts to gain colonies in Africa.
J A Hobson and later Lenin linked the problem of shrinking continental
markets driving European capital overseas to an inequitable
distribution of wealth in industrial Europe. Lenin contended that the
wages of workers did not represent enough purchasing power to absorb
the vast amount of capital accumulated during the Second Industrial
Revolution. A fundamental maldistribution of purchasing power during
the great industrial expansion of the post-World War I era might have
been the Second Great Depression's main contributing factor.
Hobson concluded that finance was manipulating events to its own
profit, but often against broader national interests. Second, any such
statistics only obscure the fact that formal African control of
tropical Africa had strategic implications in an era of feasible
inter-capitalist competition, particularly for Britain, which was under
intense economic and thus political pressure to secure lucrative
markets such as India, China and Latin America.
After the revolution, feudalism dissipated in France, with a
qualitative change in the organization of the productive forces brought
about by capitalism. In the communist Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics, the state, armed with a socialist vision based on theory,
had to combat a working feudalism without the benefit of an alternative
model besides capitalism. The productive relations of industrialization
were not at odds with the dictatorship of the proletariat.
Industrialization was carried out without capitalism. Socialist
industrialization worked in the early decades of the Soviet experience.
The Soviet economic collapse in the 1980s was caused by the US-induced
arms race where under capitalism, profit from private defense
contractors recharged the US economy, while in the USSR, the arms race
merely drained resources from the socialist economy.
Just as industrial capitalism had replaced mercantilism and commercial
capitalism in the 18th century, finance capitalism supplanted
industrial capitalism in the late 19th century. A new form of
neo-imperialism emerged in which direct political control becomes less
necessary. Today, what is needed to ensure US control are local
governments friendly to US economic domination through global finance.
The relationship of Christianity to the modern world has been very
complicated. Often Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox leaders and
their separate congregations have resisted the modern emphasis on
individualism, rationalism, and democracy. They have insisted on the
authority of traditional structures, liturgies, and beliefs. The major
Protestant groups emerged in an atmosphere in which "tradition" was
blamed for many abuses in the church. Although in this sense they
opened the way for modern ideas in the church, Martin Luther, John
Calvin and others were socially conservative. The most radical wings of
the major Protestant groups (eg Huldreich Zwingli's Puritans) were the
most critical of the authority of tradition, of traditional liturgy,
sacramental theology, and ecclesiastical institutions (eg, bishops).
The relationship of the Puritans to the middle-class political and
social revolutions of the 17th-19th centuries has been much debated,
but that some relationship existed between them is undeniable.
The virtues and failures of modernity are beginning to come into focus
for social scientists, philosophers and theologians in a postmodern
era. "Advances" in medicine, science, transportation, and political
relationships are coupled with serious ecological, social, and
religious problems: pollution, alienation, medical costs and ethics,
care for elderly people, crises of religious belief and overt
paganization of society. What is liberating for one person or group is
a tragedy for another. Within the Christian Church, democratization of
leadership may constitute an advance over the tyranny of bishops or
elders for some, yet lead to weak leadership and confusion for others.
For four centuries Protestants perceived their rejection of images,
liturgy and sacraments as a liberation from superstition and idolatry,
yet this rejection of sacrament and liturgy is perceived by many in the
21st century as having left spiritual worship devoid of symbols - pale,
lifeless and alienating.
The struggle to modernize has preoccupied Chinese leaders for more than
a century. The ominous prospect of dismemberment precipitated reform
movements in China by 1898, five decades after the Opium War of 1841.
Limited modernization efforts had been gathering pace decades earlier,
taking shape in the form of a "Self-Strengthening Movement" in reaction
to the Anglo-French occupation of Peking in 1860. The movement was
inspired by a slogan conceived by scholar Wei Yuan: "Learn the superior
barbarian techniques with which to repel the Barbarians." The movement
concentrated on military modernization. Most progressive Chinese at
that time felt that China had little to learn from the West.
The Self-Strengthening Movement was proved ineffective in the defeat by
Japan in 1895. Building momentum after the defeat by France in 1885 and
solidified after the Japanese defeat, Chinese scholars and officials
determined that a thorough institutional reform was necessary. The
brilliant constitutional monarchist reformer Kang Yu-wei (1858-1927)
and his student Liang Qi-chao (1873-1929) urged reforms along the lines
of the Meiji Restoration of Japan and the Westernization of Russia by
Peter the Great. The aim was not complete Westernization, but "Chinese
learning as fundamentals, Western learning for practical application",
as described by the scholar-official Zhang Zi-dong. The failure of
Kang's "Hundred Days" Reform of 1898 led to reactionary sponsorship of
the xenophobic Boxer uprising, which ended with an eight-power invasion
of China. Sun Yat-sen (1866-1925), a Western-trained medical doctor and
a Christian, led a revolutionary movement to overthrow the last
dynastic government in Chinese history. The revolution succeeded in
1911, adopting a Western-style republic.
In the 1911 bourgeois revolution, China had a face-lift in government
structure, but the social structure built up over four millennia
continued untouched. The influx of Western ideas began with the
translation of the Bible and religious tracts in the pre-Opium-War
period that ended in 1841. The unequal treaties that resulted from the
Opium War and subsequent Western military invasions, opened China to
unrestricted Christian missionary invasion.
Of the 795 titles translated by Protestant missionaries between 1810
and 1867, 86 percent were on Christianity and only 6 percent were on
the humanities and science. Chinese progressives then became convinced
that a cultural revolution was necessary to modernize China. Those who
had studied in Japan, Europe, the US and the USSR returned home in the
mid-1910s to promote a New Cultural Movement, and an intellectual
revolution that culminated in the patriotic May Fourth Student
Movement. The spirit of the age was dominated by a fervent opposition
to traditionalism and Confucianism, and religious superstition, except
Christianity, which was mistakenly viewed as a "scientific" religion.
Most progressives embraced total Westernization with an embrace of
Western science and democracy within the context of the naive
understanding of these terms. That movement soon split according the
separate foreign experience of the returned students and activists. Hu
Shih, a student of John Dewey's pragmatism, advocated an evolutionary
approach to modernization, while Chen Du-xiu and Li Da-chao advocated
Marxist class struggles.
The evolution from agricultural feudalism to capitalism in the
non-Western world had been captured by Western imperialism for the
benefit of the West. This in turn distorted and retarded the evolution
of capitalism into socialism in the whole world, both in the
capitalistic core and the exploited periphery.
In China, the traditional social stratification of four main classes -
literati-scholars, farming peasants, artisans and merchants - crumbled
in the face of two emerging group under Western imperialism: the
compradors and the militarists who, as the new rich and the new
powerful, dominated a Chinese society systemically impoverished by
Western imperialism. These two classes could not possibly revive
Chinese civilization because compradorism works for foreign interests
and militarism is fundamentally destructive to civilization.
It is an undeniable fact that the Communist Party of China, despite
inevitable false starts and costly social experimentation, has evolved
as the only social/political institution able to resist Western
imperialism and its policy of dismemberment. The Party transformed the
Chinese peasant from a passive member of an inert entity into an
activist member of the state. As long as the Party adheres to its
mission of representing the interest and welfare of the peasants that
constitute 85 percent of the population, and focus on a march toward
modernity with Chinese characteristics, it will avoid the fate of other
modernization movements before it. The lesson for the non-Western world
is that true modernity must carry a healthy dose of indigenous
characteristics. |
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