No empire was ever
created with the active and enthusiastic participation of the populations incorporated
into that empire. Empires are, and always have been, based on conquest and war,
often savage and brutal. The passage of time and a combination of an influx of
people from the conquering power coupled with relentless propaganda about how
much worse off people would be if they actually decided to run their own
affairs sometimes convinces the conquered to accept their status but, more
often than not, disputes about ownership and sovereignty rumble on, sometimes
for centuries. Even though they know that the territories were seized by force
in the first place, imperial powers somehow end up believing that they have some
sort of natural right to the possessions thus gained.
Those in the Tory
Party who still have that imperial mindset (i.e. almost all of them) have been
outraged by the agreement
of the Labour government to transfer what seems to be partial sovereignty over the Chagos
Islands to Mauritius. Handing over a few remote islands in the Indian Ocean is,
apparently, an unparalleled act of treason (somewhat ignoring the fact that it
was the previous Tory Government which opened the negotiations). But in truth,
Labour aren’t much better. They have negotiated over the heads of the Chagossians
themselves who have had no input into the process, and whose ancestral
homelands have been treated as something to be traded and transferred. And, in
some form or another, the transfer has been made conditional on retaining some
sort of control over Diego Garcia, the large US/UK military base, from which
Chagossians will continue to be excluded.
It's presented as
some sort of final resolution of a long-outstanding post-colonial problem, but
the reality will almost certainly turn out to be different. There is a question
as to whether the negotiations have truly been conducted between equals, or
whether there isn’t an element of power differential at play. And no ‘agreement’
which has been reached, no matter how well negotiated, where one of the
negotiators holds most of the cards is ever likely to stick in the long term.
The UK should have learned that from the case of Gibraltar, for instance. In
theory, it was ceded to the UK ‘in perpetuity’ under the Treaty of Utrecht in
1713, but that treaty was effectively simply recognising that the peninsular
had already been seized by force. The territory was ceded under pressure as
part of the settlement of a war, but it was hardly a negotiation between
equals, and Spain's claim to the territory is still live.
‘Perpetuity’ might
appear to be a word with a clear meaning, but in terms of territorial disputes,
it simply means ‘until the balance of power changes’. It may be a decade or two
away, but the question of sovereignty over Diego Garcia hasn’t really been ‘resolved’
at all, merely postponed. And the wishes of the Chagossians will make
themselves known in due course, not necessarily in the form of acceptance of
the deal done between two far away governments. The British, or perhaps I
should say English, Empire won’t ever be truly over until the last remnants
have been disposed of, and there’s a lot more outrage still to come from those
who retain the imperial mindset.
2 comments:
In the film ZULU the Welsh seemed to be quite happy expanding the empire into Zululand ????
Not sure what your point is, but referring to 'the Welsh' is maybe using too broad a brush, based on a fictionalised version of a film. But if your point is that at least some of those in nations which find themselves subject to rule by others as a result of conquest join in the imperial programme, then yes, of course. It was ever thus. 'Welsh' (or rather 'British') soldiers served in the Roman Legions as well. Serving the de facto ruling classes of the day has a long history. So what?
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