Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
stripes to accept the necessity of imposing order on an increasingly
chaotic world. By overthrowing Saddam Hussein, the Bush administration and its allies calculated that they could remake Iraqi politics and society. Deployed creatively, hard power could instill new
cultural values. The United States would use its unrivaled military
and economic might to bolster failed states and control totalitarian
regimes through benevolent imperial-style trusteeship.
The primary advocates of this strategy were those we now call
neoconservatives, joined by Christian evangelicals and right-wing
ideologues who welcomed the opportunity to put their faith in hard
power and unilateralism into practice. Other enthusiasts were professional and amateur theorists and historians. Harvard historian
Niall Ferguson, for one, publicly declared himself a “fully paid-up
member of the neo-imperialist gang.” Echoing Baron Cranworth’s
depiction of the British Empire as a civilizing force that underwrote
a worldwide “liberalized economic system,” Ferguson asserted that
global security depended on America’s readiness to become an imperial power on the British model. Championing the invasion of Iraq, he
urged the United States to intervene in the domestic affairs of foreign
nations to impose peace and promote his conception of liberal capitalism.6 Economist Deepak Lal similarly lauded earlier western empire
builders for laying the foundations of global capitalism. Envisioning an American empire as a benevolent Hobbesian Leviathan that
would sponsor an “international moral order,” Lal promised that this
benign application of hard power would defuse the Islamicist threat
by forcibly integrating Muslim states into a liberal worldwide capitalist economy.7
While other scholars and public intellectuals were less bold or dogmatic in promoting an American imperial agenda, a surprising number
4 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
shared the confi dence that imperial methods could restore global stability if applied in conjunction with responsible international institutions.
Harold James and Strobe Talbott suggested that a renewed and updated
western imperial order might mitigate the negative and destabilizing
consequences of the free movement of goods, diseases, and would-be
terrorists around the world by serving as a quasi-global government.
The legal scholar Amy Chua similarly believed empires could be a
force for global stability if they were suffi ciently diverse, pluralistic,
and tolerant.8
This reading of history ignores the essential characteristic of
empire: the permanent rule and exploitation of a defeated people by
a conquering power. By their very nature, empires can never be—
and never were—humane, liberal, or tolerant. Would-be Caesars
throughout history sought glory, land, and, most important, plunder.
This true nature of empire was more obvious in premodern times
when it was unnecessary to disguise such base motives. In recent centuries, however, imperial conquerors have tried to hide their naked
self-interest by promising to rule for the good of their subjects. This
was and always will be a cynical and hypocritical canard. Empire has
never been more than naked self-interest masquerading as virtue.
Defenders (and even critics) of twenty-fi rst-century imperial
projects employ abstract, romanticized, and top-down perspectives of
empire. This book will do the opposite, employing concrete examples
of how empires actually ruled. In looking at the experience of empire
from the bottom up, it does not claim to speak for the voiceless or
to right past wrongs. Injustice is a constant in human history, and
certainly no sainthood is conferred by being conquered. Nevertheless, the empires covered in this book demonstrate that imperial rule
always meant denigration and exploitation. Ultimately, the fundamental reality of empires is that they are unsustainable because their
subjects fi nd them intolerable.
This book will prove this by examining the actual experience of
imperial rule in seven empires: Roman Britain, Umayyad Spain, Spanish Peru, India under the British East India Company, Napoleonic Italy,
Britain’s Kenya colony, and Nazi-occupied France. Each example in its
own way shows why empires are unbearable and eventually untenable. Rome remains the standard by which all empires are judged, yet
it actually lacked the power to intervene in the daily lives of its sub-Introduction 5
jects in Britain. The Umayyad Caliphate in medieval Spain demonstrates that conquered people could swallow up imperial rulers who
could not maintain the distinction between
citizen
and
subject
. Taking
this lesson to heart, the Spanish wrung unprecedented wealth out of
the peoples of the Peruvian highlands by using religion and culture to
defi ne them as inherently different. A century later, the British East
India Company carved out a private commercial empire in South Asia
by stepping into the shoes of the Mughal emperors, but the company’s
shareholders and employees similarly enriched themselves by depicting Indians as distinctly different and exploitable. The gradual development of larger national identities blocked Napoleon from using
similar tactics in Italy, and the collapse of his brief empire marked the
end of viable imperial rule in Europe. While empire appeared reborn
in Africa and Asia during the “new imperialism” of the late nineteenth
century, the equally short-lived and often brutal British imperial state
in Kenya exploded the notion that empires could ever be liberal or
humanitarian. Adolf Hitler’s brief but vicious tenure as the imperial
ruler of France affi rmed this reality by pushing the inherent logic of
empire building to its brutal and inevitable limit.
Of course, these examples are neither defi nitive nor exhaustive.
There is no shortage of empires to choose from—the Byzantine, Chinese, Persian, Ottoman, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese, and Soviet
empires also would have furnished examples—but collectively these
particular examples chart the evolution and demise of empires. They
are linked, with each empire drawing on the ideologies and practices
of its predecessors. The Romans conquered the ancestors of the British, the Umayyad Arabs occupied Spain, the Spanish seized the Andes
from the Inkas, the British built an empire in Mughal India, the
French turned the Italian descendants of the Romans into subjects,
modern Britons added Kenya to their empire, and the Nazis ruled
France as an imperial power.
Beginning with Rome is essential because imperial enthusiasts
portray it as the model for future empires. In fact, we know very
little about what life was like for common people under Roman rule.
Ancient Britons lived at the edges of the empire, but most were typical “subjects,” meaning slaves, tenants, and peasant farmers. Their
rulers relied on assimilated, “romanized” local elites to actually govern. Commoners in Britain and indeed the rest of the provinces were
6 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
too divided by local customs and habits to band together to resist this
domination. Roman rule was therefore exploitive but long-lived in
Britain precisely because its reliance on assimilated local allies made
it seem less crushing.
Most modern histories of empire rarely mention medieval Muslim Spain (Al-Andalus), and the Umayyad Arabs never actually
claimed to be imperial rulers. Nevertheless, Al-Andalus shared many
of the same characteristics as Rome. Initially a remote and resistive
province of the larger Umayyad Caliphate, Iberia became an autonomous emirate under a refugee Umayyad prince. At fi rst glance, the
imperial state he founded, which lasted from the eighth to twelfth
centuries, appeared to match Rome in its stability and limitations.
Like the Romans, the Umayyads shared power with assimilated local
notables, but the Muslim empire builders’ religious obligation to convert conquered populations undermined their status as a ruling elite.
Even more than in the ancient era, the necessity of recruiting local
allies allowed large numbers of urban Iberians to escape subjecthood
by converting to Islam, thereby gradually changing the character of
the imperial state itself. By the high point of Spanish Umayyad rule
in the tenth century, intermarriage and conversion had thoroughly
blurred the distinction between Arab and Iberian ruling elites. Rural
and common people, however, probably did not convert to Islam in
large numbers. Their overlords may have shifted from Christianity to
Islam and then back again during the Reconquista, but the oppressive
realities of imperial rule led most Iberians to seek protection within
their local communities.
In the fi fteenth century, empires gained a greater capacity to place
more systematic and sustainable demands on their subjects. However,
these early modern states still bore little resemblance to the empires of
popular contemporary imagination. Francisco Pizarro and the Spanish conquistadors became fabulously wealthy by looting the Inkan
Empire, but to actually govern common Andeans their successors fell
back on the systems of imperial control pioneered by the Romans
and Umayyads. Consequently, although the Spanish Crown’s empire
in South America lasted into the nineteenth century, it struggled to
exert direct control over the hybrid local communities of Spanish settlers, Andeans, and African slaves that emerged from the wreckage of
the Inkan Empire.
Introduction 7
The apparent longevity and coherence of Britain’s empire in India
is equally misleading. It was the British East India Company, not the
Crown, that won the right to collect taxes in Bengal in the name of
the Mughal emperors. Posing as Mughal vassals, grasping company
employees known as nabobs wrung enormous profi ts out of Bengal
and the rest of India by taking over its revenue collection systems.
Ordinary Bengalis probably paid little attention because one set of
tribute collectors simply appeared to replace another, but in time
they realized that their new overseers had an insatiable appetite for
revenue. Imperial enthusiasts credit the British East India Company
with integrating India into the global capitalist order, but the cost for
common people was economic dislocation, cultural degradation, and
in some cases famine.
Conversely, the development of the nation-state in the late eighteenth century rendered empire unsustainable in the west. Premodern empires were relatively stable because local customs and identities
were strong enough to mitigate the crushing effects of foreign rule.
Nationalism, which imagined that populations were culturally and
ethnically homogeneous, made it more diffi cult to recruit these allies.
It also rendered imperial rule far more onerous by alienating those
who clung to local identities.9 Napoleon Bonaparte’s empire was supposedly based on the universalizing ideals of the French Revolution—
liberty, equality, fraternity—but for local communities Napoleonic
rule meant unyielding demands for tribute and military conscripts.
This was a new and more burdensome kind of nationalistic and
extractive empire building, one that employed modern bureaucratic
and policing tools to intervene more extensively into the daily lives of
conquered people than ever before. Yet the beginnings of nationalism
also inspired many people in Italy and throughout Europe to defend
their autonomy, which contributed to the rapid demise of Napoleon’s
short-lived empire.
Although formal imperial rule was no longer feasible in Europe,
in the late nineteenth century westerners engaged in a fi nal spasm
of empire building, known as the “new imperialism,” in Africa and
Asia. With the exception of Russia, the nations that took part in this
“scramble” were, to varying degrees, liberal democracies. Pandering to
the humanitarian concerns of western voting publics, empire builders
promised both to extract profi ts and to civilize. While the invention of
8 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
advanced weapons such as the Maxim gun was hardly a great cultural
achievement, the new imperial conquerors equated military weakness with racial inferiority. The result was a brutal and humiliating
system of imperial domination. In practice, however, these empires
were viable only as long as subject populations identifi ed themselves
in local terms. Once the common experience of imperial subjugation
inspired Africans and Asians to think collectively (if not nationally),
imperial rule collapsed.
The Third Reich was also a twentieth-century empire. Counting
Nazi-occupied France as an imperial case study may seem controversial
because it equates suffering under German rule with the experiences
of Africans and Asians. Yet in many ways Hitler was the most honest
empire builder of the modern era. Where the British and French used
racist rhetoric to give their imperial projects a humanitarian veneer,
Hitler was an unapologetic social Darwinist who conquered, plundered, and murdered in the name of the German
Volk
. This was the
logical endpoint of the legitimizing pseudoscientifi c racial ideologies
of the new imperialism. Furthermore, the French experience of Nazi