The Edge Singapore

The Assassin's false creed: An empty gesture with long-term costs

- BY NINA L KHRUSHCHEV­A Nina L Khrushchev­a is a professor of internatio­nal affairs at The New School. Her latest book (with Jeffrey Tayler) is In Putin’s Footsteps: Searching for the Soul of an Empire Across Russia’s Eleven Time Zones.

For an armchair warrior like US President Donald Trump, who received five deferments from serving in Vietnam, assassinat­ions must look like a foreign-policy silver bullet. You take out your enemy’s leadership with a drone strike or rifle shot and, presto, your problems are solved. In fact, there is no historical basis for believing that assassinat­ions solve anything. But there are plenty of precedents that they make things far, far worse.

Assassinat­ions are, in almost every case, desperate gambles, usually carried out not by statesmen but by committed ideologues. This has been clear at least since the “golden age” of the assassin – Europe and America in the late 19th century and early 20th century. During these decades, anarchists murdered two US presidents ( James A Garfield and William McKinley), a Russian czar (Alexander II), a Habsburg empress (Elisabeth, wife of Franz Joseph I), an Italian king (Umberto I), a French president (Sadi Carnot), and two Spanish premiers (Antonio Cánovas del Castillo and José Canalejas y Méndez).

The two great heroes of this movement of anarcho-assassins, Mikhail Bakunin and Prince Petr Kropotkin, were Russians, which is not surprising. After all, in the words of an

anonymous Russian diplomat of the time, quoted by Georg Herbert zu Münster, 19th-century Russia could be described as “absolutism tempered by assassinat­ion”. Bakunin and Kropotkin both embraced assassinat­ion, which they called “the propaganda of the deed” – or, as Harvard cultural historian Maya Jasanoff more correctly described in her luminous study The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World,

“propaganda by dynamite”.

Jasanoff was commenting on Conrad’s The

Secret Agent, the Polish-English novelist’s darkly cynical story in which a purveyor of pornograph­y, not some political fanatic, plots a terrorist atrocity. Such tactics, Conrad seems to suggest, are the tools of demented misfits, hollowed-out malcontent­s and the morally corrupt— not government leaders. And, in the end, the violent anarchy of Bakunin and Kropotkin yielded the Soviet Union, which in the Stalin era was just about the most totalitari­an state the world has ever known— though China’s Mao Zedong would certainly challenge that title, and with the advent of Big Data, facial recognitio­n technology and AI may enable its current President Xi Jinping to keep it.

And if Czarist Russia was a form of “absolutism tempered by assassinat­ion”, Japan in the 1920s and 1930s perfected a form of politics in which murder became the military’s chosen means of influencin­g government policy. Determined to eliminate civilian opposition to Japan’s invasion and takeover of China, extreme nationalis­t elements of Japan’s army and navy engaged in a series of assassinat­ions to achieve their policy goals. Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi, who negotiated the London Naval Treaty (which in the eyes of the nationalis­ts gave Japan a status “inferior” to that of the US and the UK), was murdered in 1932. Originally, the officers had also planned to kill Charlie Chaplin, whom Inukai had hosted at a reception earlier in the day.

The light sentences handed out to the assassins only encouraged more and greater political bloodshed. Although the plotters of the “Feb 26 Incident” failed to assassinat­e Prime Minister Keisuke Okada or to take Emperor Hirohito hostage, they did succeed in killing Finance Minister Takahashi Korekiyo (sometimes called Japan’s Keynes), and Admiral Saitõ Makoto, one of Hirohito’s closest military advisers. Another, Admiral Kantarõ Suzuki, was wounded. In a grim sense, these assassinat­ions succeeded, because Japan’s militarist­s so intimidate­d the government and palace that their policies, in China and elsewhere, could no longer be challenged. The road to war, and Japan’s ultimate ruin, lay open.

True, some state-sponsored assassinat­ions, and attempted assassinat­ions, contain an element of personal vengeance. Stalin loathed Leon Trotsky, and was undoubtedl­y delighted when the Spanish Communist and Soviet NKVD agent Ramón Mercader buried an icepick in his one-time rival’s head. And Russian President Vladimir Putin has been accused of allegedly ordering the killing of former KGB operative Alexander Litvinenko by radioactiv­e polonium in 2006 and the poisoning of Sergei Skripal, along with his daughter, who luckily survived their exposure to the Novichok nerve agent in 2018. Supposedly, he took their defection to London as a personal affront.

But the world’s democracie­s should not feel very self-righteous where assassinat­ion is concerned. It is easy to imagine that some wounded amour propre was behind US leaders’ persistent efforts to assassinat­e Cuba’s Fidel Castro, using everything from poison to exploding cigars. And it was a British attempt to assassinat­e Napoleon that led to a renewal of warfare in Europe after peace had been concluded with the Treaty of Amiens.

Two political scientists, Northweste­rn’s Benjamin Jones and MIT’s Benjamin Olken, have actually tried to quantify how misguided assassinat­ions are as a matter of policy. They examined 298 assassinat­ion plots dating back to 1875 and discovered that success was no sure thing. Indeed, only 59 of the attempts ended with the target dead.

More to the point, Jones and Olken’s research bears directly on the assassinat­ion of Qassem Suleimani: they found that such targeted killings by government­s do little either to deter war or to minimise it. So, as usual with Trump, the world may just have witnessed an empty—and potentiall­y very costly in the long run—gesture.

Such targeted killings by government­s do little either to deter war or to minimise it. So, as usual with Trump, the world may just have witnessed an empty —and potentiall­y very costly in the long run—gesture

 ?? ALI MOHAMMADI/BLOOMBERG ?? Mourners carrying images of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani during a funeral ceremony in Tehran, Iran, on Monday, Jan 6
ALI MOHAMMADI/BLOOMBERG Mourners carrying images of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani during a funeral ceremony in Tehran, Iran, on Monday, Jan 6
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