YES! Magazine
by Stephen Zunes
On the outskirts of a desert town in the Moroccan-occupied territory of
Western Sahara, about a dozen young activists are gathered. They are involved
in their country's long struggle for freedom. A group of foreigners-veterans of
protracted resistance movements-is conducting a training session in the optimal
use of a "weapons system" that is increasingly deployed in struggles
for freedom around the world. The workshop leaders pass out Arabic translations
of writings on the theory and dynamics of revolutionary struggle and lead the
participants in a series of exercises designed to enhance their strategic and
tactical thinking.
These trainers are not veterans of guerrilla warfare, however, but of
unarmed insurrections against repressive regimes. The materials they hand out
are not the words of Che Guevara, but of Gene Sharp, the former Harvard scholar
who has pioneered the study of strategic nonviolent action. And the weapons
they advocate employing are not guns and bombs, but strikes, boycotts, mass
demonstrations, tax refusal, alternative media, and refusal to obey official orders.
Serbs, South Africans, Filipinos, Georgians, and other veterans of
successful nonviolent struggles are sharing their knowledge and experience with
those still fighting dictators and occupation armies.
The young Western Saharans know how an armed struggle by an older generation
of their countrymen failed to dislodge the Moroccans, who first invaded their
country back in 1975. They have seen how Morocco's allies on the U.N. Security
Council-led by France and the United States-blocked enforcement of U.N.
resolutions supporting their right to self-determination. With the failure of
both armed struggle and diplomacy to bring them freedom, they have decided to
instead employ a force more powerful.
The Rise of Nonviolence
The long-standing assumption that dictatorial regimes can only be overthrown
through armed struggle or foreign military intervention is coming under
increasing challenge. Though nonviolent
action has a long and impressive history going back centuries, events in
recent decades have demonstrated more than ever that nonviolent action is not
just a form of principled witness utilized by religious pacifists. It is the
most powerful political tool available to challenge oppression.
It was not the leftist guerrillas of the New People's Army who brought down
the U.S.-backed Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines. It was nuns praying the
rosary in front of the regime's tanks, and the millions of others who brought
greater Manila to a standstill.
It was not the 11 weeks of bombing that brought down Serbian leader Slobodan
Milosevic, the infamous "butcher of the Balkans." It was a nonviolent
resistance movement led by young students, whose generation had been sacrificed
in a series of bloody military campaigns against neighboring Yugoslav
republics, and who were able to mobilize a large cross-section of the population
to rise up against a stolen election.
It was not the armed wing of the African National Congress that brought
majority rule to South Africa. It was workers, students, and township dwellers
who-through the use of strikes, boycotts, the creation of alternative
institutions, and other acts of defiance-made it impossible for the apartheid
system to continue.
It was not NATO that brought down the communist regimes of Eastern Europe or
freed the Baltic republics from Soviet control. It was Polish dockworkers, East
German church people, Estonian folk singers, Czech
intellectuals, and millions of ordinary citizens.
Similarly, such tyrants as Jean-Claude Duvalier in Haiti, Moussa Traoré in
Mali, King Gyanendra in Nepal, General Suharto in Indonesia, and, most
recently, Maumoon Gayoom in the Maldives were forced to cede power when it
became clear that they were powerless in the face of massive nonviolent
resistance and noncooperation.
The power of nonviolent action has been acknowledged even by such groups as Freedom House, a Washington-based organization with close ties
to the foreign policy establishment. Its 2005 study observed that, of the
nearly 70 countries that have made the transition from dictatorship to varying
degrees of democracy in the past 30 years, only a small minority did so through
armed struggle from below or reform instigated from above. Hardly any new
democracies resulted from foreign invasion. In nearly three-quarters of the
transitions, change was rooted in democratic civil-society organizations that
employed nonviolent methods. In addition, the study noted that countries where
nonviolent civil resistance movements played a major role tend to have freer
and more stable democratic systems.
A different study, published last year in the journal International Security, used an expanded database and
analyzed 323 major insurrections in support of self-determination and
democratic rule since 1900. It found that violent resistance was successful
only 26 percent of the time, whereas nonviolent campaigns had a 53 percent
success rate.
From the poorest nations of Africa to the relatively affluent countries of
Eastern Europe; from communist regimes to right-wing military dictatorships;
from across the cultural, geographic and ideological spectrum, democratic and
progressive forces have recognized the power of nonviolent action to free them
from oppression. This has not come, in most cases, from a moral or spiritual
commitment to nonviolence, but simply because it works.
Why Nonviolent Action Works
Armed resistance, even for a just cause, can terrify people not yet committed
to the struggle, making it easier for a government to justify violent
repression and use of military force in the name of protecting the population.
Even rioting and vandalism can turn public opinion against a movement, which is
why some governments have employed agents provocateurs to encourage such
violence. The use of force against unarmed resistance movements, on the other
hand, usually creates greater sympathy for the government's opponents. As with
the martial art of aikido, nonviolent opposition movements can engage the force
of the state's repression and use it to effectively disarm the force directed
against them.
In addition, unarmed campaigns involve a range of participants far beyond
the young able-bodied men normally found in the ranks of armed guerrillas. As
the movement grows in strength, it can include a large cross-section of the
population. Though most repressive governments are well-prepared to deal with a
violent insurgency, they tend to be less prepared to counter massive non-cooperation
by old, middle-aged, and young. When millions of people defy official orders by
engaging in illegal demonstrations, going out on strike, violating curfews,
refusing to pay taxes, and otherwise refusing to recognize the legitimacy of
the state, the state no longer has power. During the "people power"
uprising against the Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines, for example,
Marcos lost power not through the defeat of his troops and the storming of the
Malacañang Palace but when-due to massive defiance of his orders-the palace
became the only part of the country he still effectively controlled.
Furthermore, pro-government elements tend to be more willing to compromise
with nonviolent insurgents, who are less likely to physically harm their
opponents when they take power. When massive demonstrations challenged the
military junta in Chile in the late 1980s, military leaders convinced the
dictator Augusto Pinochet to agree to the nonviolent protesters' demands for a
referendum on his continued rule and to accept the results when the vote went
against him.
Unarmed movements also increase the likelihood of defections and
non-cooperation by police and military personnel, who will generally fight in
self-defense against armed guerrillas but are hesitant to shoot into unarmed
crowds. Such defiance was key to the downfall of dictatorships in East Germany,
Mali, Serbia, the Philippines, Ukraine, and elsewhere. The moral power of
nonviolence is crucial to the ability of an opposition movement to reframe the
perceptions of the public, political elites, and the military.
A Democratizing Force
In many cases, armed revolutionaries-trained in martial values, the power of
the gun, and a leadership model based upon a secret, elite vanguard-have
themselves become authoritarian rulers once in power. In addition, because
civil war often leads to serious economic, environmental, and social problems,
the new leadership is tempted to embrace emergency powers they are later
reluctant to surrender. Algeria and Guinea-Bissau experienced military coups
soon after their successful armed independence struggles, while victorious
communist guerrillas in a number of countries simply established new
dictatorships.
By contrast, successful nonviolent movements build broad coalitions based on
compromise and consensus. The new order that emerges from that foundation tends
to be pluralistic and democratic.
Liberal democracy carries no guarantee of social justice, but many of those
involved in pro-democracy struggles have later played a key role in leading the
effort to establish more equitable social and economic orders. For example, the
largely nonviolent indigenous peasant and worker movements that ended a series
of military dictatorships in Bolivia in the 1980s formed the basis of the
movement that brought Evo Morales and his
allies to power, resulting in a series of exciting reforms benefiting the country's
poor, indigenous majority.
Another reason nonviolent movements tend to create sustainable democracy is
that, in the course of the movement, alternative institutions are created that
empower ordinary people. For example, autonomous workers' councils eroded the
authority of party apparatchiks in Polish industry even as the Communist Party
still nominally ruled the country. In South Africa, popularly elected local
governments and people's courts in the black townships completely usurped the
authority of administrators and judges appointed by the apartheid regime long
before majority rule came to the country as a whole.
Recent successes of nonviolent tactics have raised concerns about their use
by those with undemocratic aims. However, it is virtually impossible for an
undemocratic result to emerge from a movement based upon broad popular support.
Local elites, often with the support of foreign powers, have historically
promoted regime change through military invasions, coup d'états, and other
kinds of violent seizures of power that install an undemocratic minority.
Nonviolent "people power" movements, by contrast, make peaceful
regime change possible by empowering pro-democratic majorities.
Indeed, every successful nonviolent insurrection has been a homegrown
movement rooted in the realization by the masses that their rulers were
illegitimate and that the political system would not redress injustice. By
contrast, a nonviolent insurrection is unlikely to succeed when the movement's
leadership and agenda do not have the backing of the majority of the
population. This is why the 2002-2003 "strike" by some privileged
sectors of Venezuela's oil industry failed to bring down the democratically
elected government of Hugo Chavez, while the widely supported strikes in the
Iranian oil fields against the Shah in 1978-1979 were key in bringing down his
autocratic regime.
Homegrown Movements
Unlike most successful unarmed insurrections, Iran slid back under autocratic
rule after the overthrow of the Shah. Now, hard-line clerics and their allies
have themselves been challenged by a nonviolent pro-democracy movement. Like
most governments facing popular challenges, rather than acknowledging their own
failures, the Iranian regime has sought to blame outsiders for fomenting the
resistance. Given the sordid history of U.S. interventionism in that
country-including the overthrow of Iran's last democratic government in 1953 in
a CIA-backed military coup-some are taking those claims seriously. However,
Iranians have engaged in nonviolent action for generations, not just in
opposition to the Shah, but going back to the 1890-1892 boycotts against
concessions to the British and the 1905-1908 Constitutional Revolution. There
is little Americans can teach Iranians about such civil resistance.
Citing funding from Western governments and foundations, similar charges of
powerful Western interests being responsible for nonviolent insurrections have
also been made in regard to recent successful pro-democracy movements in
Serbia, Georgia, and Ukraine.
However, while outside funding can be useful in enabling opposition groups
to buy computers, print literature, and promote their work, it cannot cause a
nonviolent liberal democratic revolution to take place any more than Soviet
financial and material support for leftist movements in previous decades could
cause an armed socialist revolution to take place.
Successful revolutions, whatever their ideological orientation, are the
result of certain social conditions. Indeed, no amount of money could force
hundreds of thousands of people to leave their jobs, homes, schools, and
families to face down heavily armed police and tanks and put their bodies on
the line. They must be motivated by a desire for change so strong they are
willing to make the sacrifices and take the personal risks to bring it about.
In any case, there is no standardized formula for success that a foreign
government could put together, since the history, culture, and political
alignments of each country are unique. No foreign government can recruit or
mobilize the large numbers of ordinary civilians necessary to build a movement
capable of effectively challenging the established political leadership, much
less of toppling a government.
Even workshops like the one for the Western Saharan activists, usually
funded through nonprofit, nongovernmental foundations, generally focus on
providing generic information on the theory, dynamics, and history of
nonviolent action. There is broad consensus among workshop leaders that only
those involved in the struggles themselves are in a position to make tactical
and strategic decisions, so they tend not to give specific advice. However,
such capacity-building efforts-like comparable NGO projects for sustainable
development, human rights, equality for women and minorities, economic justice,
and the environment-can be an effective means of fostering international
solidarity.
Back in Western Sahara, anti-occupation activists, building on their own
experiences against the Moroccan occupation and on what they learned from the
workshop, press on in the struggle for their country's freedom. In the face of
severe repression from U.S.-backed Moroccan forces, the movement continues with
demonstrations, leafleting, graffiti writing, flag waving, boycotts, and other
actions. One prominent leader of the movement, Aminatou Haidar, won the Robert
F. Kennedy Human Rights Award last November, and she has been twice nominated
for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Those in the Western Sahara resistance are among the growing numbers of
people around the world struggling against repression who have recognized that
armed resistance is more likely to magnify their suffering than relieve it.
From Western Sahara to West Papua to the West Bank, people are engaged in
nonviolent resistance against foreign occupation. Similarly, from Egypt to Iran
to Burma, people are fighting nonviolently for freedom from dictatorial rule.
Recent history has shown that power ultimately resides in the people, not in
the state; that nonviolent strategies can be more powerful than guns; and that
nonviolent action is a form of conflict that can build, rather than destroy.
Stephen Zunes wrote this article for Learn as You Go, the Fall
2009 issue of YES! Magazine. Stephen is a professor of Politics and
International Studies at the University of San Francisco and chairs the
academic advisory committee of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict.
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