What Is a Dictator?
What is a dictator, or an authoritarian? I'll
bet you think you know. But perhaps you don't. Sure, Adolf Hitler, Joseph
Stalin, and Mao Zedong were dictators. So were Saddam Hussein and both Hafez
and Bashar al Assad. But in many cases the situation is not that simple and
stark. In many cases the reality -- and the morality -- of the situation is far
more complex.
Deng Xiaoping was a dictator, right? After all,
he was the Communist Party boss of China from 1978 to 1992. He was not elected. He ruled
through fear. He approved the massacre of protesters at Tiananmen Square in
Beijing in 1989. But he also led China in the direction of a market economy
that raised the standard of living and the degree of personal freedoms for more
people in a shorter period of time than perhaps ever before in recorded
economic history. For that achievement, one could arguably rate Deng as one of
the greatest men of the 20th century, on par with Winston Churchill and
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
So is it fair to put Deng in the same category
as Saddam Hussein, or even Hosni Mubarak, the leader of Egypt, whose sterile rule did little to prepare his
people for a more open society? After all, none of the three men were ever
elected. And they all ruled through fear. So why not put them all in the same
category?
Or what about Lee Kuan Yew and Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali? During the early phases of Lee's rule in Singapore he certainly
behaved in an authoritarian style, as did Ben Ali throughout his entire rule in
Tunisia. So don't they both deserve to be called authoritarians? Yet Lee raised
the standard of living and quality of life in Singapore from the equivalent of
some of the poorest African countries in the 1960s to that of the wealthiest
countries in the West by the early 1990s. He also instituted meritocracy, good
governance, and world-class urban planning. Lee's two-volume memoir reads like
the pages in Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans. Ben Ali,
by contrast, was merely a security service thug who combined brutality and
extreme levels of corruption, and whose rule was largely absent of reform. Like
Mubarak, he offered stability but little else.
You get the point. Dividing the world in black
and white terms between dictators and democrats completely misses the political
and moral complexity of the situation on the ground in many dozens of
countries. The twin categories of democrats and dictators are simply too broad
for an adequate understanding of many places and their rulers -- and thus for
an adequate understanding of geopolitics. There is surely a virtue in blunt,
simple thinking and pronouncements. Simplifying complex patterns allows people
to see underlying critical truths they might otherwise have missed. But because
reality is by its very nature complex, too much simplification leads to an
unsophisticated view of the world. One of the strong suits of the best
intellectuals and geopoliticians is their tendency to reward complex thinking
and their attendant ability to draw fine distinctions.
Fine distinctions should be what geopolitics and
political science are about. It means that we recognize a world in which, just
as there are bad democrats, there are good dictators. World leaders in many
cases should not be classified in black and white terms, but in many
indeterminate shades, covering the spectrum from black to white.
More examples:
Nawaz Sharif and his rival, the late Benazir
Bhutto, when they alternately ruled Pakistan in the 1990s were terrible administrators. They
were both elected by voters, but each governed in a thoroughly corrupt,
undisciplined and unwise manner that made their country less stable and laid
the foundation for military rule. They were democrats, but illiberal ones.
The late King Hussein of Jordan and the late
Park Chung Hee of South Korea were both dictators, but
their dynamic, enlightened rules took unstable pieces of geography and provided
them with development and consequent relative stability. They were dictators,
but liberal ones.
Amid this political and moral complexity that spans disparate
regions of the Earth, some patterns do emerge. On the whole, Asian dictators
have performed better than Middle Eastern ones. Deng of China, Lee of Singapore, Park of South
Korea, Mahathir bin
Mohammad of Malaysia, Chiang Kai-Shek of Taiwan were all authoritarians to one
degree or another. But their autocracies led to economic and technological
development, to better governance, and to an improved quality of life. Most
important, their rules, however imperfect, have overall better positioned their
societies for democratic reforms later on. All of these men, including the
Muslim Mahathir, were influenced, however indirectly and vaguely, by a body of
values known as Confucianism: respect for hierarchy, elders, and, in general,
ethical living in the here-and-now of this world.
Contrast that with Arab dictators such as Ben Ali of Tunisia,
Mubarak of Egypt, Saddam of Iraq, and the al Assads of Syria. Ben Ali and Mubarak, it is
true, were far less repressive than Saddam and the elder Assad. Moreover, Ben
Ali and Mubarak did encourage some development of a middle class in their
countries. But they were not ethical reformers by any means. Of course, Saddam
and al Assad were altogether brutal. They ran states so suffocating in their
levels of repression that they replicated prison yards. Rather than
Confucianism, Saddam and al Assad were motivated by Baathism, a half-baked Arab
socialism so viciously opposed to Western colonialism that it created a far
worse tyranny of its own.
Beyond the Middle East and Asia there is the case of Russia. In the 1990s, Russia was
ruled by Boris Yeltsin, a man lauded in the West for being a democrat. But his
undisciplined rule led to sheer economic and social chaos. Vladimir Putin, on
the other hand, is much closer to an authoritarian -- and is increasingly so --
and is consequently despised in the West. But, helped by energy prices, he has
restored Russia to some measure of stability, and thus dramatically improved
the quality of life of average Russians. And he has done this without resorting
to the level of authoritarianism -- with the mass disappearances and
constellation of Siberian labor camps -- of the czars and commissars of old.
Finally, there is the most morally vexing case of all: that of the
late Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. In the 1970s and 1980s, Pinochet
created more than a million new jobs, reduced the poverty rate from a third of
the population to as low as a tenth, and the infant mortality rate from 78 per
1,000 to 18. Pinochet's Chile was one of the few non-Asian countries in the
world to experience double-digit Asian levels of economic growth at the time.
Pinochet prepared his country well for eventual democracy, even as his economic
policy became a model for the developing and post-Communist worlds. But
Pinochet is also rightly the object of intense hatred among liberals and
humanitarians the world over for perpetrating years of systematic torture
against tens of thousands of victims. So where does he fall on the spectrum
from black to white?
Not only is the world of international affairs one of many
indeterminate shades, but it is also one in which, sometimes, it is impossible
to know just where to locate someone on that spectrum. The question of whether
ends justify means should not only be answered by metaphysical doctrine, but
also by empirical observation -- sometimes ends do justify means, sometimes
they don't. Sometimes the means are unconnected to the ends, and are therefore
to be condemned, as is the case with Chile. Such is the intricacy of the
political and moral universe. Complexity and fine distinctions are things to be
embraced; otherwise geopolitics, political science, and related disciplines
distort rather than illuminate.
Robert D. Kaplan is Chief
Geopolitical Analyst at Stratfor, a geopolitical analysis
firm, and author of the bestselling book The
Revenge of Geography. Reprinted with permission.
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