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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Deng Xiaoping’s Victory

What emerged intact from the massacre of defenseless students and other citizens in Beijing's Tiananmen Square was not communism, but a version of authoritarian capitalism on a grand scale. It is a model that appeals to autocrats all over the world, including in countries that succeeded in throwing off communist rule 30 years ago.
China’s massive protest movement in the spring of 1989, centered in (but
not confined to) Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, seems to have been the
anti-Communist revolt that failed. As the brutal crackdown on and
following June 3-4 played out, political freedom was being won in
Central Europe – first in Poland and Hungary, and then, beginning that
fall, in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, and, albeit violently
and rather undemocratically, Romania. Within the next two years, the
Soviet Union, cracked open by Mikhail Gorbachev’s reforms, finally
imploded.
These democratic revolutions followed the “People Power” rebellions a
few years earlier in Northeast and Southeast Asia. Bliss it was to be
alive in those days. Francis Fukuyama was not the only American who
believed that liberal democracy had triumphed forever. There was no
alternative to what was widely seen as a natural symbiosis between
capitalism and open societies. One couldn’t exist without the other.
Once the middle classes had their economic freedom, true democracy would
surely follow.
Such was the sense of liberal post-Cold War triumph at the time that
many Western countries, especially the United States, saw no reason any
longer to contain the animal spirits of free enterprise with much
government regulation. This was also the message brought to
post-communist Europe by various evangelists of neoliberalism.
China appeared to be the outlier. Apart from such backwaters as Cuba and
North Korea, only there had Communist rule prevailed. China continued
to be ruled by the Communist Party of China. But was that really a
victory for communism? In fact, what emerged intact from the massacre of
defenseless students and other citizens was not really communism at
all, but Deng Xiaoping’s version of authoritarian capitalism.
Deng had been praised in the West for renouncing decades of Maoist
autarky and opening China for global business. He unleashed capitalist
enterprise with the words “Let some people get rich first,” a phrase
that gained currency as “To get rich is glorious.” This was the ideology
that needed to be defended from students protesting against corruption
and demanding political reforms. That is why People’s Liberation Army
tanks were used to crush the revolt. It was a savage response, but as
one of the Party leaders said: “As for this fear that foreigners will
stop investing, I’m not afraid. Foreign capitalists are out to make
money and they’ll never abandon a big market for the world like China.”
China never looked back (literally as well as figuratively, because the
events of June 3-4 are unmentionable). The economy soon steamed ahead.
And the educated urban classes, from which most of the student
protesters in 1989 sprang, benefited enormously. They were offered more
or less the same deal as the better-off citizens of Singapore, or even
Japan, even though neither of these countries are dictatorships: stay
out of politics, don’t question the authority of the one-party state,
and we’ll create the conditions for you to get rich.
Even educated young Chinese now have little or no knowledge of what
happened 30 years ago. And when they do, they often react to foreigners
who broach the subject with prickly nationalism, as though talking about
it were a sign of anti-Chinese animus. One suspects that this
defensiveness might be the result of a slightly guilty conscience: many
people have benefited from a shabby deal.
In 2001, a year after Vladimir Putin came to power in Russia, I traveled
from Beijing to Moscow and wrote an article comparing Russia favorably
to China. I assumed that Russia was well on its way to becoming an open
democracy. I was wrong. In fact, Russia became more like Deng Xiaoping’s
China, albeit a less successful version. Some people became immensely
wealthy. Parts of Moscow give the impression of a new gilded age.
Something similar has happened in Central European countries. Hungary’s
prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has been most the most vociferous
ideologue of “illiberal democracy,” a system of oppressive one-party
rule in which capitalism can still thrive. It looks as if the right-wing
populist demagogues of Western Europe, and even the US, would like to
follow this example. Like Donald Trump, they are all more or less
unreserved admirers of Putin.
Of course, this was not the way it was supposed to happen. The
assumption was too strong, especially in America, but also in most other
Western countries, that liberal democracy and capitalism were
inseparable. We now know that this is not true. It is perfectly possible
to be a rich entrepreneur, or even just a well-off middle-class
consumer, in a one-party state where basic political freedoms are
stifled.
We should actually have known this all along. Singapore offered a
perfect example of authoritarian capitalism. It was dismissed, because
Singapore was too small, or because “Asians” were not interested in
democracy, as Singapore’s rulers never ceased to point out. The Chinese
protest movement in 1989 proved that this was not the case, either.
Democratic reforms that would guarantee freedom of speech and assembly
were of great interest to the students in Tiananmen Square.
What happened in China after the protests were crushed points to another
truth. China was not an outlier in 1989 at all. Illiberal capitalism
has since emerged as an attractive model to autocrats all over the
world, including in countries that succeeded in throwing off communist
rule 30 years ago. The Chinese just got there first.
Ian Buruma is the author of numerous books, including Murder in
Amsterdam: The Death of Theo Van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance, Year
Zero: A History of 1945, and, most recently, A Tokyo Romance.

