Trans-border
Activism: A Casualty of Cold War II
International NGOs
that assist citizens suffering from the abuses of corporations and
environmental degradation are increasingly seen by governments as nuisances, embarrassments
and even as threats to national security. Russia, India and Canada are a few of
the nations that have protested against these “meddlers” and looked for ways to
keep them out.
At first glance, it
seems absurd to say that well-intentioned organizations should be banned and
stopped from assisting helpless victims with their struggles for justice. But
the governments that are complaining about the interference are not entirely
wrong for being upset with the political affiliations and agendas of some
groups that come under the guise of helping vulnerable people suffering
injustices. Unfortunately, there are organizations operating across borders who
are giving a bad name to the NGOs that truly are independent and focused solely
on helping the disenfranchised. These fake NGOs, or once-respected NGOs now compromised
by deals with government or corporate agendas, are like the black block thugs
who show up at peaceful demonstrations and give the larger movement a bad
reputation.
A case in point is
the recent pressure that Russia put on the Russian NGO Planet of Hopes. For fifteen years the founder, Nadejda Kutepova,
helped victims of the Southern Urals radiation disasters in their struggles to
win recognition and compensation. In July 2015, she fled Russia after being
vilified in the media and threatened with prosecution for being a “foreign
agent” because of one of the donations she accepted. She is now in France where
she has applied for asylum.[1]
Nadejda Kutepova (left) in a photo from the Radio-Canada report on radiological contamination in the Southern Urals |
There is no disputing
the value of the work she did, or the goodness of her cause. There are so many
ways the Russian government could have done the right thing so that Ms. Kutepova
would not have needed to look outside Russia for support. Russia could have
stopped the financial harassment that was designed to neutralize Planet of Hopes, and it could have created
some easy terms under which the organization could continue to operate. It
could have even offered a government grant to replace the objectionable source
of foreign funding. Or a real genius move would have been to just take
responsibility for the consequences of the environmental catastrophe so that
ordinary citizens wouldn’t have to go bankrupt, scrounge and beg for the money
needed to assert their rights. But that would have required the government to
face up to some unpleasant facts about its global nuclear reactor sales
campaign, which depends on promises to treat foreign-generated nuclear waste
back at the Maiak plant in the Urals.[2] Furthermore, facing up to the consequences
would highlight the danger of renewing the nation’s nuclear arsenal.
Unfortunately, Russia has too much at stake, so it can’t tolerate dissenting
voices that just want the state to take responsibility of the damage that has
been caused.
Nonetheless, the
Russian government had some good reasons to be displeased with the activities
of many American “NGOs” and “independent non-profit organizations” that have
been active in Russia for many years. Unfortunately, the organization which Ms.
Kutepova accepted donations from, the American National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), is one which the Russian government objected to. NED
makes no secret of the fact that it is financed by the US Congress, although it
makes the implausible claim that its sponsor has no political influence because
it has an “independent” board.[3] A report in The Guardian cited the Russian accusation that NED gave $14 million
to support the overthrow of the Ukrainian government in 2014.[4]
Gerald Sussman’s 2006
paper on American “democracy assistance” since the 1990s gives a full account
of NED’s role as one of the primary organizations that have been active in
promoting American interests in the post-Soviet world. The introduction reads:
The methods of
manipulating foreign elections have been modified since the heyday of CIA cloak
and dagger operations, but the general objectives of imperial rule are
unchanged. Today, the U.S. government relies less on the CIA in most cases and
more on the relatively transparent initiatives undertaken by such public and
private organizations as the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the U.S.
Agency for International Development (USAID), Freedom House, George Soros’ Open
Society, and a network of other well-financed globetrotting public and private
professional political organizations, primarily American, operating in the
service of the state’s parallel neoliberal economic and political objectives.[5]
Thus Planet
of Hopes, with its small NED grant, became collateral damage in the great
game being played out over eastward NATO expansion. This raises the question of
whether NED ever really cared about how the pursuit of bigger goals would leave
small organizations like Planet of Hopes
twisting in the wind once the backlash came. After all, it’s not as if the US
government or NED has ever been morally outraged by the consequences of
operating nuclear facilities outside of Russia. The tactic of funding an
anti-nuclear activist in Russia raises the question of whether a sincere and
dedicated activist, and the people she helps, were cynically used in a bid to slow
down the Russian nuclear project, to give GE-Hitachi and Toshiba-Westinghouse a
fighting chance against Rosatom’s growing dominance in
nuclear exports. If NED had a few million dollars to meddle in Ukraine, it is
obvious now that it owes Ms. Kutepova a few euros to help her live in exile,
but this would present another dilemma for her. If she accepted, this would be
taken as proof by the Russian government that she really was under America’s
wing.
It is also notable
that while NED took this keen interest in helping the victims of Russia’s Cold
War nuclear contamination, it turned a blind eye to the similar legacy on the
home front. For example, the Hanford Downwinders lawsuits crawled through the
justice system for decades because the plaintiffs were no match for the large
corporations that had a guarantee of government subsidy of their legal fees.
Rather than settle they just kept enriching Kirkland and Ellis, a Chicago law
firm, in order to stall the case until the victims gave up or died.[6] How
would the American public react if a Russian government-funded organization
stepped in to help the farmers who lived downwind from America’s Cold War
plutonium factory? How would it not be conceived of as interference in national
security?
For Ms. Kutepova, the
decision to take the NED grant may have been naïve, or something done out of frustration
with the official harassment she was subjected to. It is something she didn’t
explain in her recent interview with journalists from the French magazine Mediapart. [7] If she was not able to
read English or not well-informed about American propaganda methods, she
probably walked into this situation not fully aware of the pitfalls that lay
ahead. In any case, her work remained focused on helping victims of radiation
poisoning and nothing else.
Photo from the Radio-Canada report on radiological contamination in the Southern Urals |
For anyone who
follows American politics, the NED website has several tip-offs that
immediately flag it as smoothly aligned with American foreign policy. For
example, it gave an award to
Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner for doing something unspecified
related to democracy promotion. A map of its grant recipients shows that it has
an interest in promoting democracy only in countries that have resisted American
neoliberal economic policies. Countries like Cuba and Venezuela are deemed to
be in dire need of democracy development. On the other hand, NED shows no
interest in fostering democracy at home. It has nothing to say about voter
registration, reform of the electoral college, reform of the
first-past-the-post system, district gerrymandering, making election day a
holiday, or eliminating the influence of corporations on election campaigns. Nor
does it find any flaws in American allies like Indonesia and Japan. West Papua
could use a democracy enhancement grant so that it could teach the world how
their nation was given away to Indonesia in a sham election in 1969 in which a
total of only 1,000 votes were cast at gunpoint.[8] Or a grant could go to
Japan to help it find ways to get more than 50% of eligible voters to the
polls.[9]
In all of this there
is a grim lesson for anyone who wants to organize support for any cause. All
would-be donors have to be vetted for their ties to governments or to how they
are beholden to other interests, and in many cases these will not be easy to
uncover. Even when a source of support seems untainted, there is no way to be
sure that the national government will not declare it as a “terrorist”
organization or foreign agent because questioning national projects like
nuclear energy or oil sands development is now framed by governments as
threats to economic security, which is then equated with national security.
Photo from the Radio-Canada report on radiological contamination in the Southern Urals |
None of what I’ve
written here should be taken as a criticism of Nadejda Kutepova’s solid record
of defending victims of radiation poisoning, nor do I take sides in the New
Cold war or find reason to rejoice in the fact that Russian cruise missiles are
now falling on the Middle East instead of American cruise missiles. I feel
disgusted, and though I wouldn’t wish harm on anyone, Mercutio’s line from Romeo and Juliet comes to mind: A plague a' both your houses! Any nation
that still insists on mining uranium, creating nuclear waste and possessing
nuclear weapons has indeed cursed itself with no help from enemies. It brings
the nuclear plague and a pathological security obsession upon itself.
UPDATE 2016/09/13: Read the exchange between Jill Stein, presidential candidate for the American Green Party, and two persecuted Russian environmentalists, Yevgeniya Chirikova and Nadezhda Kutepova.
See also:
Daria Litvinova, "TV Witch Hunt Drives Human Rights Activist Out of Russia," Moscow Times, October 15, 2015.
"Leftist MP wants to brand media companies financed from abroad," Russia Today, October 22, 2015, https://www.rt.com/politics/319383-leftist-mp-wants-to-brand/
UPDATE 2016/09/13: Read the exchange between Jill Stein, presidential candidate for the American Green Party, and two persecuted Russian environmentalists, Yevgeniya Chirikova and Nadezhda Kutepova.
Notes
[1] Amélie
Poinssot and Michel de Pracontal, “A
Russian antinuclear activist asks for asylum in France,” Mediapart,
October 2, 2015. English translation at: http://nf2045.blogspot.jp/2015/10/a-russian-antinuclear-activist-asks-for.html
[2] Jason
Zasky, “Plutopia”
(interview with author Kate Brown), Failure Magazine, January 19,
2014, http://failuremag.com/feature/article/plutopia/
[4] Alec
Luhn, “National
Endowment for Democracy is first ‘undesirable’ NGO banned in Russia,” The
Guardian, July 28, 2015,
[5] Gerald
Sussman, “The
Myths of ‘Democracy Assistance’: U.S. Political Intervention in Post-Soviet
Eastern Europe,” Monthly Review, December 6, 2006, http://monthlyreview.org/2006/12/01/the-myths-of-democracy-assistance-u-s-political-intervention-in-post-soviet-eastern-europe/ .
[6] Plutopia:
Interview with Kate Brown on Talking Stick TV (transcript), http://nf2045.blogspot.jp/2015/04/plutopia-interview-with-kate-brown-on.html .
Originally published as video on Talking Stick TV,
Seattle.
[7] Amélie Poinssot and Michel de Pracontal.
[8] John
Pilger, “Secret
war against defenseless West Papua,” johnpilger.com, March 9,
2006, http://johnpilger.com/articles/secret-war-against-defenceless-west-papua
[9] “Romping
Home,” The Economist, December 15, 2014, http://www.economist.com/news/21636467-shinzo-abe-wins-easily-weak-mandate-voters-romping-home
See also:
Daria Litvinova, "TV Witch Hunt Drives Human Rights Activist Out of Russia," Moscow Times, October 15, 2015.
"Leftist MP wants to brand media companies financed from abroad," Russia Today, October 22, 2015, https://www.rt.com/politics/319383-leftist-mp-wants-to-brand/
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