Current primary frontrunner
Newt Gingrich is often referred to as one of the leading "intellectuals" of the
Republican Party. Gingrich has encouraged this view, even suggesting that the $1.6
million in consulting fees he received from Freddie Mac were for his services
as a "historian."
In recent years, Gingrich's
historical output has been mainly confined to a series of co-authored
war thrillers and alternate
histories. But he does indeed hold a Ph.D. in history from Tulane
University and taught the subject at West Georgia College during the 1970s.
Curious about whether Gingrich's
background as a historian does, in fact, shed any light on his current views, I
decided to give a read to his 1971 doctoral thesis on the unlikely topic of Belgian
Education Policy in the Congo: 1945-1960.
Several bloggers -- notably Morehouse
College professor and African politics blogger Laura
Seay -- have discussed
the thesis before, particularly in reference to Gingrich's comments last
year that President Obama's policies are evidence of "Kenyan, anticolonial behavior."
Indeed, even considering that he was
at a southern university in the early 1970s, Gingrich's attitudes toward
colonialism seem remarkably benign, often drifting into "White Man's Burden"
territory:
It would
be just as misleading to speak in generalities of ‘white exploitation' as it
once was to talk about ‘native backwardness.' We need to know what kind of
exploitation, for what reasons, and at what price. However this is a most
difficult task since political pressures encourage Black xenophobia. It would
be only too easy for the leaders of developing countries faced with massive
domestic problems, to divert public attention toward the ‘white man's guilt.'...
Within the
beliefs of twentieth century American liberalism, European colonialism is an unacceptable
political policy, but what did it mean to the natives? Did the colonial powers
perform a painful but positive function in disrupting traditional society and
so paving the way for modernization?
It should be noted that Gingrich
here is not discussing the brutal period in the late 19th and early 20th
century when the Congo was ruled as a "free state" under the
direct ownership of King Leopold II, during which as many as 5 to 10 million
Congolese may have been slaughtered and many more maimed and dismembered. Gingrich does concede that the free state was "the
most clearly abusive government in nineteenth century colonialism."
But he takes a fairly rosy
view of the Belgian colonial administration from 1908 - when the government in
Brussels formally took over administration of the colony -- until independence
in 1960:
"Belgian colonialism was in fact a
model of technocratic government. It analysed and planned for Congolese
economic development with a thoroughness that virtually none of the now
independent African states can match. The Belgians were far more aware than
either the British or the French of the need to develop the entire society from
the most backward peasant to the most advanced university graduate. "
Gingrich takes the view that Belgian practices in the Congo --
education policies in particular -- are worth analyzing since the colonial government
was able to implement its policies without any resistance from either a
disenfranchised Congolese population or a disinterested Belgian government.
Gingrich isn't quite an apologist for Belgian colonialism.
He argues that while it was quite effective at developing primary schools, its
failure to build an effective secondary education system left the country
without a leadership class, and unable to meet the challenges of independence. He
writes, "The Belgians as the sole masters of
this region for a half a century must accept the blame for having failed so
miserably to prepare this subjects to government themselves."
Part of the problem, Gingrich says, is that while
the Belgians "did try to design education programs
that eased the pain of modernization for the Congolese" and "developed the
largest primary and vocational school systems in Black Africa" they were too
often "indifferent to Congolese needs and
made major decisions primarily based on Belgian economic interests." All the
same, Gingrich sympathetically notes that "even where they fell short of
their goals they tried hard."
Notably, no Congolese sources are quoted in the dissertation
and only a handful of Congolese individuals are mentioned by name, so he doesn't
seem to consider whether the local population were appreciative all of the efforts
the Belgians undertook in the name of civilizing them. (Needless to say, he doesn't seem to have traveled to Congo in the course of writing the paper.) When their complaints do come up, they're
treated more as unproductive resentment than legitimate historical grievances. For
instance, a comment made by King Badouin at Congo's independence ceremony
praising the benevolence of King Leopold -- by any standards, one of history's
great mass murderers -- is described by Gingrich as a "faux pas" that "upset"
Congolese leaders.
Most interesting in the context of modern Republican
politics is Gingrich's primary explanation for the failure of the Belgians to "'prepare"
the Congolese for governance. It's not that their civilizing mission was flawed
to begin with - he seems generally sympathetic toward their aims - it's that
technocratic government itself is inherently flawed. There's more than a bit of
F.A. Hayek in his conclusion:
This dissertation
began by suggesting that the Belgian Congo had been virtually a planner's
dream. However, the bureaucracy lacked adequate information to develop a timetable
for modernization. ... It is now clear that the dream of technocratic planning
had all too many hidden limitations and so became a nightmare.
It's as if colonialism is the ultimate example of the
failure of Big Government.
Another passage the
jumps out in one in which Gingrich goes way beyond the scope of his
dissertation to sketch out a bleak vision of a future riven by inequality
between the developed and developing worlds:
Some
specialists argue that American society will be warped and disfigured by this
growing disparity in living standards. They suggest that as communications
become more pervasive poverty-ridden populations will demand that the developed
countries share their wealth. In response the developed nations will become
virtual fortresses. A siege mentality will come to dominate and the liberal,
open-ended society of the past century will have been replaced by a grim,
inward-looking military camp. Without accepting the more extreme predictions,
one can still agree with Robert McNamara that American society is far more
threatened by the development gap than by Chinese nuclear capability.
I'm guessing it probably won't come
up at tonight's debate, but I would love to hear whether Gingrich still
believes that inequality is more dangerous than nukes.